European Political Science Association 2nd Annual Conference PROGRAMME Auferstehungskirche und Neue Mälzerei Berlin, June 21-23 2012 1 EPSA News The 2013 Conference Parlament de Catalunya, Barcelona, Spain The Journal The European Political Science Association is proud to introduce its new journal: POLITICAL SCIENCE RESEARCH AND METHODS published with PSRM is a general political science journal dedicated to publishing work of highest quality. It will focus on applied empirical, formal theoretical, and relevant methodological work. The first issue of PSRM will be launched at EPSA’s 2013 conference in Barcelona. Editors: Vera Troeger, Cameron Thies, Ken Benoit, Simon Hug, Francesco Squintani 2 European Political Science Association Members of the EPSA Council 2011-2013 Voting Members of EPSA Council Elected Members David Farrell (University College Dublin) Simon Hug (University of Geneva) Mark Kayser (Hertie School of Governance) Thomas König (Mannheim University) Jonas Pontusson (University of Geneva) Ignacio Sanchez-Cuenca (Juan March Institute) Gerald Schneider (Konstanz University) Vera Troeger (University of Warwick) Ex-officio Members President: David Soskice (Duke University/Oxford University) Treasurer/Vice-President: Ken Benoit (London School of Economics) Executive Director: Ray Duch (Oxford University) Chair of Programme Committee: Thomas Plümper (University of Essex) Chair of Local Organization Committee: Gerald Schneider (University of Konstanz) Secretary: David Sanders (University of Essex) Non-Voting Members James Alt (Harvard University) John Aldrich (Duke University) 1 2 Table of Content Venue Information Maps Meetings and Receptions Program Grid Conference Program Thursday Friday Saturday Restaurants in the Venue’s Vincinity Public Transportation in Berlin 10 things to do in Berlin Author Index 4 6 7 8 9 9 22 37 50 51 52 57 3 Venue Information Umweltforum Berlin Auferstehungskirche GmbH | Pufendorfstr. 11 | 10249 Berlin | Fon +49 30 52 68 021 0 | Fax +49 30 52 68 021 10 | www.besondere-orte.com | Auferstehungskirche Rooms Sem 8 Sem 9 Sem 10 Sem 12 st Church 1 floor st Church 1 floor nd Church 2 floor nd Church 2 floor 4 Neue Mältzerei Rooms Sem 1 Sem 2 Kuppel S Kuppel N Plenar th Neue Mälzerei 5 floor th Neue Mälzerei 5 floor th Neue Mälzerei 5 floor th Neue Mälzerei 5 floor th Neue Mälzerei 5 floor 5 Berlin Hotel Area and Venue Location Berlin Hotel Area and Scheunenviertel 6 Meetings and Receptions Thursday 11.00 EPSA Council Meeting, Church Hall (council members) 19.00: EPSA General Assembly and Welcome, Church Hall (all welcome) 19.30: British Election Study sponsored Reception, Church Hall (all welcome) Friday 11.00: Presidential Roundtable: Why Parties?, Church Hall (all welcome) Panelists: John Aldrich, Jim Alt and David Soskice Moderator: Ray Duch 18.00: Political Science Research and Methods: The EPSA Journal – A Roundtable with Free Drinks, Church Hall (all welcome) Panelists: Vera Troeger, Ken Benoit 19:00: EPSA Reception, Church Hall (all welcome) Advertisement Bertelsmann Stiftung´s project Sustainable Governance Indicators (SGI) explores OECD countries along a set of 147 indicators in terms of their need for reform (Status Index) and their capacity for reform (Management Index). Employing both qualitative and quantitative research methods, the SGI seek to identify effective policy-making strategies by means of systematic comparison. The SGI’s in-depth country reports and the international rankings are backed up by the collective expertise of more than 80 renowned international scholars. Additionally, the SGI project conducts various special studies focusing on sustainability related topics such as social justice or intergenerational justice. Moreover, the policy performance and governance capacities of the emerging economic powers Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa (BRICS) have been systematically examined by means of the SGI framework of analysis. In this manner, the SGI seek to contribute to the debate on “good governance” and sustainable policy-making, identify successful models and foster international learning processes within the OECD and beyond. For more information please see www.sgi-network.org. 7 Program Grid Thursday Room Seminar 1 Seminar 2 Kuppel S Kuppel N Plenar Seminar 8 Seminar 9 Seminar 10 Seminar 12 8.30 10.30 2002 1107 1301 2102 1004 1703 2308 1401 2402 12.30 1605 2105 1501 1404 1205 1903 1001 1704 2203 14.45 2504 2501 1505 1306 1108 1907 1009 2206 2301 17.00 2007 2505 1502 1201 1606 2404 1802 1810 2104 Friday Room Seminar 1 Seminar 2 Kuppel S Kuppel N Plenar Seminar 8 Seminar 9 Seminar 10 Seminar 12 8.30 2201 2304 1804 1601 1902 1105 1406 1206 1008 10.30 2306 2406 2106 1803 1302 1503 1602 2005 1202 12.30 2305 2407 1101 1402 1005 1207 1806 2001 2109 14.45 2202 1904 1801 1002 1104 1507 1303 2506 2108 17.00 2003 2410 1607 1304 1701 1805 1901 2006 2303 Saturday Room Seminar 1 Seminar 2 Kuppel S Kuppel N Plenar Seminar 8 Seminar 9 Seminar 10 Seminar 12 8.30 2405 2408 2302 1006 1504 1307 1807 1603 1204 10.30 2103 2403 1604 1509 1702 1007 1203 1905 2409 12.30 2503 1906 1705 1508 1403 2205 1102 1305 2307 14.45 1808 2502 1405 1506 1103 1003 1106 2107 2207 17.00 Table cells display the panel ID. 8 1809 2004 2101 2204 Thursday 9.00 Registration is open. Thursday 10.30-12.15 1004 Party Programs and Campaign Mobilization Luz Marina Arias and Luis de la Calle Why Do States Decentralize? The Impact of Colonial Legacies and Independence-War Dynamics in PostIndependence Spanish America Section: Electoral Politics Chair: Kåre Vernby Discussant: Guido Tieman Room: Plenar Helder do Vale On the Shared Merits of Federalism and Democracy Nicolas Merz, Sven Regel and Heiko Giebler A Comparative Analysis of Citizens' and Politicians' Problem Perceptions and their Effect on Electoral Choice 1301 Decision-making in the European Parliament Section: European Union Politics Chair: Paul Thurner Discussant: Gerald Schneider Room: Kuppel S Markus Wagner and Thomas M. Meyer Competence or Relevance? Explaining party programmatic profiles Heike Kluever and Jae-Jae Spoon Bringing Salience Back In: Explaining Voting Defection in the European Parliament Kathrin Thomas and Christopher Wlezien Is anyone listening? The responsiveness of public agendas to parties' issue priorities Steffen Hurka Changing the Output - The Logic of Amendment Success in the European Parliament's Committee on the Environment, Public Health, and Food Safety (ENVI) Agustin Casas Strategic Campaigning 1107 Decentralization, Participation and the Legitimacy of Rule Jack Blumenau Agenda Control in the European Parliament Section: Comparative Politics Chair: Sanford Gordon Discussant: Sanford Gordon Room: Sem 2 Monika Mühlböck and Nikoleta Yordanova Party group cohesion in the European Parliament: Tracing the bias in roll-call votes Oliver Dlabac Legitimacy of Liberal and Radical Democracies. A Comparative Analysis of the Swiss Cantons Benjamin H. Neudorfer and Natascha S. Neudorfer Decentralization and Political Corruption: Disaggregating Regional Authority 9 1401 Attitudes towards Violence 2002 The European Twin Crisis Section: Domestic and International Conflict Chair: Bernd Beber Discussant: Anita Gohdes Room: Sem 10 Section: States and Markets Chair: Joachim Wehner Discussant: Joachim Wehner Room: Sem 1 Bernd Beber, Philip Roessler, and Alexandra Scacco Who Supports Partition and Why? New Survey Evidence from Sudan Michael Courtney Looking a Gift Horse in the Mouth - A Multi-Method Analysis of Irish MPs Attitudes to the EU and the Bailout Livia I. Schubiger and Manuel Vogt Transnational Norms or National Institutions? Mitigating Mining Conflicts in Latin America Thibault Darcillon Political Partisanship and Financial Reforms in Advanced Countries (1970-2009) Barry Hashimoto and Stefan Priebe Civil War, Mental Trauma and Post-War Human Capital: Evidence From Surveys of Ex-Yugoslavs in Eight Countries Achim Goerres and Stefanie Walter Presents to Voters or Fat Cats? Explaining Voter Reactions to Policy Responses towards the Global Financial and Economic Crisis of 2008/9 John W. Schiemann Fearful Memories & Political Mobilization: Croatian Serbs & the Serbian Democratic Party Isabel Camisão The importance of timely political leadership in times of crisis: the EU case 1703 Regulators, Regulatees, Regulatory Policies 2102 Political Economy: Evidence from African Cases Section: Public Policy Chair: Isabelle Engeli Discussant: Mark Schelker Room: Sem 8 Section: Multilevel Politics Chair: Daniel Berger Discussant: Daniel Berger Room: Kuppel N Martino Maggetti and Fabrizio Gilardi Meta-Regulation through Networks: The Case of EU Energy Regulators Frank-Borge Wietzke Universal primary education, private schooling, and interreligious inequality: evidence from Madagascar Giorgia Nesti Explaining Variations in European Regulatory Styles: a comparative analysis of Independent Regulatory Agencies in the EU Broadcasting Sector Sean Fox The Political Economy of Slums in Africa: Theory and Evidence from an Interdisciplinary Study Tom Goodfellow Taming the Boda-Bodas: State Effectiveness and Urban Informal Transport in Africa Isabelle Engeli and Andrew Appleton Negotiating Biotechnology Regulation: Interests, Expertise, and Policy Johannes Kleibl The Politics of Financial Regulatory Agency Replacement Peter Sandholt Jensen and Mogens K. Justesen The economic origins of vote buying in Africa 10 2308 Decision-Making in Committees 2402 Political Trust Section: Parties and Elections Chair: Peter Stone Discussant: Christian Houle Room: Sem 9 Section: Politics and Society Chair: David Hugh-Jones Discussant: Benjamin Engst Room: Sem 12 Peter Stone Introducing Difference into the Condorcet Jury Theorem Zsolt Boda and Gerg Medve-Bálint Institutional trust in Central and Eastern European countries: Is it different from Western Europe? Steven J. Brams and D. Marc Kilgour When Does Approval Voting Make the 'Right Choices'? Theofanis Exadaktylos and Nikolaos Zahariadis Policy Implementation and Political Trust: Greece in the Age of Austerity Ingo Rohlfing and Daniel Schultz Do party members influence party ideology? A quantitative analysis of 12 European countries in the 1990s and 2000s Conrad Ziller Social trust in the Face of Ethnic Diversity - A Regional Approach David Hugh-Jones Dynamics of Interethnic Trust Nikitas Konstantinidis Military Conscription as a Commitment Device 11 Thursday 12.30 – 14.30 1001 Determinants and Consequences of Competence Votes Krzysztof Pelc The Effects of Depth of Integration after WTO Accession Section: Electoral Politics Chair: Federico Vegetti Discussant: Elias Dinas Room: Sem 9 Nikitas Konstantinidis Differentiated Integration and Institutional Design 1404 Resources, Economic Shocks, and Conflict Sergi Pardos-Prado Valence voting and coalition governments Gijs Schumacher and Matthijs Rooduijn Anti-establishment as a selling point. Explaining the Populist Party Vote in Four Recent Elections Section: Domestic and International Conflict Chair: Håvard Mokleiv Nygård Discussant: Irfan Nooruddin Room: Kuppel N Roger Scully and Richard Wyn Jones Valence Politics and Sub-State Elections: Scotland and Wales Compared Cristina Bodea Natural resources, weak state and civil war: Can rents help coup prone regimes? Debra Leiter Does Proximity Drive Valence Perceptions? The Relationship between Ideological Proximity and Valence Perceptions in Germany and the Netherlands Niklas Harder and Gerald Schneider Economic Shocks and Intra-State Conflict: A Disaggregated Study of Somalia Hanne Fjelde Economic shocks and Civil War Violence in Africa Federico Vegetti Don't blame me, I'm on your side. Party system polarization and the balance between ideology and performance in Europe Jeff Colgan Oil, Domestic Conflict, and Opportunities for 2304 Philipp Hunziker and Lars-Erik Cederman Petroleum Reserves and Ethnonationalist Conflict 1205 The Political Economy of IO Enlargement 1501 Temporal and Spatial Dependencies Section: International Politics Chair: Frank Schimmelfennig Discussant: Nils Metternich Room: Plenar Section: Political Methodology Chair: Robert J. Franzese Discussant: Vera E. Troeger Room: Kuppel S Julia Gray, Rene Lindstaedt and Jonathan Slapin The Countervailing Effects of Membership Growth in International Organizations Curtis Signorino and David Carter Time Dependent Binary Data with Censoring Christina L. Davis and Meredith Wilf Joining the Club: Accession to the GATT/WTO Frederick J. Boehmke, Olga V. Chyzh and Cameron G. Thies An Approach to Modeling Endogeneity between Network Position and Its Effect. Leonardo Baccini, Andreas Dür and Manfred Elsig Flexibility in trade agreements: Evidence from tariff schedules 12 Luís Aguiar-Conraria, Pedro C. Magalhães and Maria Joana Soares Wavelets in Politics: moving beyond bivariate analysis 1704 Health Policy Section: Public Policy Chair: Antonio Pedro Ramos Discussant: Carie Steele Room: Sem 10 Julian Wucherpfennig Modeling Heterogeneity in Simultaneity: The Conditional Spatial Lag Model Dorte Hering Cost-containment policy-mix variation of health care systems in Europe Robert J. Franzese Jr., Jude C. Hays, and Lena M. Schaffer Estimation & Interpretation of Spatiotemporal Dynamics in Binary Outcomes 1605 Mass Participation Katharina Böhm, Claudia Landwehr and Nils D. Steiner What explains 'generosity' in the public financing of high-tech drugs?: An Empirical Investigation for 26 OECD Countries and 11 Controversial Drugs Section: Behavioral Politics Chair: Shaun Bowler Discussant: Zoltan Fazekas Room: Sem 1 Philipp Trein Between Individual Treatment and Mass-based Policy Instruments: Co-evolution and Coordination of Public Health and Health Care Sectors David Nachmias, Maoz Rosenthal and Hani Zubida Local and National Electoral Turnout: A Theory and Evidence from the Israeli Case Elizabeth Galleguillos Policy change on the Swiss long-term care system: the case of the Health insurance Law Shaun Bowler, Jeffrey Karp and Adrian Millican Duty and participation: Variation of civic duty and its effect on voting behaviour Antonio Pedro Ramos Political Regimes and Death: Democracy and its Consequences on Child Mortality for 175 Countries Between 1970 and 2009 Olena Bagno-Moldavsky Mobilizing minorities: The individual-structural nexus of mobilization for protest 1903 Coalitions 1 David Farrell, Eoin O'Malley and Jane Suiter Assessing the impact of deliberation and information: an experiment in deliberative democracy Section: Political Institutions and Decisions Chair: Raymond Duch Discussant: Joachim Behnke Room: Sem 8 Martin Kroh and Harald Schoen Mobilization by Opportunity? Direct Democracy and Political Interest Serra Boranbay, Thomas König and Sven-Oliver Proksch A Model of Coalition Governance in Parliamentary Systems Catherine Moury Avoiding policy drift in coalition: Governmental actors' perception of the most effective mechanisms Henrike Schultze How and Why They Fail: Coalition Stability in Central Eastern Europe 13 Indridi H. Indridason Live for Today, Hope for Tomorrow? Rethinking Gamson's Law 2203 Latin American Politics Section: Political Systems Chair: Michael Goyer Discussant: Rodolfo Torregrosa Room: Sem 12 Raymond Duch, Ulrik Nielsen and Jean-Robert Tyran Does shared responsibility breed unfairness? 2105 Trade and the WTO Noelle Brigden Stateless Smuggling: Violence Along Unauthorized Migratory Routes through Mexico Section: Multilevel Politics Chair: Christophe Crombez Discussant: Christian Martin Room: Sem 2 Guillermo Rosas and Luigi Manzetti Horizontal Accountability in Latin America: Is Corruption Worsening in Populist Regimes? Soo Yeon Kim Negotiating the Nexus: Production Networks, Sovereignty Costs, and Behind-the-Border Commitments in Regional Trade Agreements Christian Arnold, David Doyle and Nina Wiesehomeier Measuring Presidents' Policy Positions in Latin America: A Time Series Cross Sectional Validation Sven Van Kerckhoven and Christophe Crombez (In)Equality in the WTO Dispute Settlement Mechanism: An Asymmetric Information Model Rodolfo Torregrosa and Nhorys Torregrosa Challenges of transitional justice in Colombia. A reconciliation far? Jappe Eckhardt Collective Action of Import-dependent Firms in the Making of EU Trade Policy Aurelio Wander Bastos and Debora Lacs Sichel Brazilian Electoral Procedures Alton B.H. Worthington Tariffs, Tariff-Jumping FDI, and the Proliferation of Bilateral Investment Treaties Simone Günther Bargaining Strategies in WTO Negotiations Jeffrey Kucik The "New Compensation": Managing Market Risk with Formal Trade Agreements 14 Thursday 14:45- 16.45 1009 The Conditional Nature of Vote Choices Carina Schmitt Learning from Best Practice or Drawing Political Lessons? The Privatization of Public Utilities Section: Electoral Politics Chair: Guillermo Rosas Discussant: Gijs Schumacher Room: Sem 9 Federica Genovese, Florian Kern, and Christian Martin Policy Osmosis: Rethinking diffusion processes when policies have substitutes Guillermo Rosas, Adrian Lucardi and Diana RangelAlfaro When Do Local Party Leaders Mobilize to Support Candidates to Higher Office? An Analysis of Municipal Support for Gubernatorial and Presidential Candidates in Mexico Xavier Fernández-i-Marín Methods for Assessing Diffusion of Institutions on a Comparative Perspective 1306 Inter-institutional Politics in the EU Zachary Peskowitz Ideological Signaling and Incumbency Advantage Section: European Union Politics Chair: Daniel Naurin Discussant: Thomas König Room: Kuppel N Elias Dinas and Florian Foos The downstream effects of Federalism: Electoral performance and participation in state legislatures Thomas Bräuninger, Martin Brunner and Thomas Däubler Personal Vote-Seeking in Flexible List Systems: Do MPs Gain Preference Votes through Bill Initiation? Camilla Mariotto and Fabio Franchino Explaining Outcomes of Conciliation Committee's Negotiations Vibeke Woien Hansen Determinants of decision making speed in the EU Simon Hix and Rafael Hortala-Vallve Does Size Matter?An Experiment on the Effects of District Magnitude on Voter Behaviour Christophe Crombez and Bjørn Høyland The Annual Budgetary Procedure in the European Union and the Implications of the Treaty of Lisbon 1108 Spatial Policy Dependence Olof Larsson and Daniel Naurin Stretching the leash. EU governments vs. the European Court of Justice. Section: Comparative Politics Chair: Rene Lindtstaedt Discussant: Fabrizio Gilardi Room: Plenar Raimondas Ibenskas and Robert Thomson The challenger model: Macro and micro-level tests on decision-making in the European Union. Damien Bol, Jean-Benoit Pilet and Pedro Riera Sagrera Addressing Systematic Failure or Following Fads? An Event-History Analysis of the Diffusion of Limited Proportional Representation across Europe Mariaelisa Epifanio, Eric Neumayer and Thomas Plümper The 'Peer-Effect’ in Counterterrorist Policies 15 1505 Counting and Scaling Words 2206 Political Extremism and Polarization Section: Political Methodology Chair: Sona Golder Discussant: Burt Monroe Room: Kuppel S Section: Political Systems Chair: Thomas Meyer Discussant: Eva Zeglovits Room: Sem 10 Aude Bicquelet Improving Robustness in Qualitative and Quantitative Content Analysis: A Three-Stage Model Zoltán Fazekas Everything is Important, so Nothing is Extreme: Individual Differences in Extreme Political Attitude Formation Philip A. Schrodt and Benjamin Bagozzi Detecting Latent Topics in Political News Reports using Latent Dirichlet Allocation Models Florence So A Theory of Party Leadership Selection: Why Large, Moderate Parties Sometimes Choose Extreme Leaders Kenneth Benoit, Daniel Schwarz and Denise Traber The Sincerity of Political Speech in Parliamentary Systems: A Comparison of Ideal Points Scaling Using Legislative Speech and Roll Call Voting Simon Munzert and Paul Bauer The decline of political polarization in German public opinion (1980-2010). Will Lowe and Kenneth Benoit Qualitative Validation of Quantitative Text Scaling Galina Zudenkova Political Competition in Hard Times Eitan Tzelgov and Burt L. Monroe Measuring the Cohesion of Political Parties and Coalitions using Parliamentary Speech Data Rune J. Sørensen Party polarization and government efficiency 1907 Formal Theory 2 2301 Government and Cabinet Section: Political Institutions and Decisions Chair: David P. Myatt Discussant: Nolan McCarty Room: Sem 8 Section: Parties and Elections Chair: Johannes Freudenreich Discussant: David Redlawsk Room: Sem 12 Alexander V. Hirsch and Kenneth W. Shotts Competitive Policy Entrepreneurship in Legislatures Martin Ejnar Hansen and Robert Klemmensen Institutional Influences on Government Policy Positions Enriquetta Aragones and Dimitrios Xefteris Candidate Quality in Downsian Model with a Continuous Policy Space Alessandro Pellegata Assessing the Degree of Political Responsiveness in Contemporary Democracies. The role of Government Alternation in Reducing Representational Distortions between Governments and Citizens in the Long Run Piero Stanig A Formal Model of Dogwhistling Niall Hughes A Model of Strategic Voting in Legislative Elections Despina Alexiadou Ideologues, Partisans and Bureaucrats: the politics of cabinet decision-making David P Myatt Choose the Candidate or Send the Signal? Tactical Voting with Policy Signalling Johannes Freudenreich Explaining Cabinet Types in Latin America 16 Hande Mutlu-Eren Cabinet Reshuffles and Duration in Single-Party Governments 2504 Transition to Democracy Section: Political Processes Chair: Carl Hendrik Knutsen Discussant: Jose Fernandez-Albertos Room: Sem 1 2501 Human Rights Violation and Democratic Transition Section: Political Processes Chair: Jeff Colgan Discussant: Jeff Colgan Room: Sem 2 Pablo Barberá When Duverger Becomes Autocratic: Electoral Systems in Non-Democratic Regimes, 1950-2008 Abel Escribà-Folch and Joseph Wright Do Human Rights Prosecutions Deter Dictators from Leaving Power? Shimaa Elsayed and Ibrahim Hatab Tunisian and Egyptian Revolutions: Causes and Trajectories Håvard Mokleiv Nygård, Scott Gates and Håvard Strand The Logic of Non-Violent Revolutions Andrew Little Signaling Strength with Elections and Electoral Repression Simon Hug and Simone Wegmann Complying with Human Rights Tina Freyburg Cooperating for Democracy? The Democratization Potential of Transgovernmental Networks Barry Hashimoto Do International Courts Guard the Guardians? The Economic Consequences of War Crimes, Crimes Against Humanity and Genocide Andreas Schedler and Bert Hoffmann The Communicative Bases of Dictatorship: Sustaining and Subverting Images of Elite Cohesion 17 Thursday 17.00 – 18.45 1201 Trade and War 1606 Public Opinion and Policy Preferences Section: International Politics Chair: Koji Kagotani Discussant: Koji Kagotani Room: Kuppel N Section: Behavioral Politics Chair: Thomas Scotto Discussant: Thomas Scotto Room: Plenar Matthew Powers The Stolper-Samuelson Theorem, Interstate Conflict, and Regime Type Diana Ichpekova After the Fall: Cohort vs. Performance in the Development of Post-Communist Attitudes Alex Weisiger Rationalist Logics of War and Interstate War Duration and Severity Jon H. Fiva, Olle Folke and Rune Sørensen Political Representation and Fiscal Policy: A Casual or Causal Relationship? Kerim Can Kavakli Innovate for Peace: Trade, Technology Transfer and War Jose Fernandez-Albertos, Alexander Kuo and Laia Balcells Globalization, Economic Crisis and Policy Preferences 1502 Roll Call 1802 Corruption Section: Political Methodology Chair: David Fortunato Discussant: Philip Schrodt Room: Kuppel S Section: Political Economy Chair: Mark Hallerberg Discussant: Jonathan Smiles Room: Sem 9 Benjamin E. Lauderdale and Tom S. Clark Scaling Meaningful Political Dimensions: Using Latent Dirichlet Allocation to Substantively Identify Many-Dimensional Item Response Models Andrew Eggers Polarization and the Electoral Control of Politicians: Evidence from the UK Expenses Scandal David Fortunato and Akitaka Matsuo Analyzing Roll Call Classification Errors Raffaele Asquer Why do citizens support corrupt governments? Evidence from the World Value Survey Simon Hug, Simone Wegmann and Reto Wüest Parliamentary Voting Procedures in Comparison Mircea Popa The Distributive Effects of Corruption Siim Trumm The Invisible Votes: Non-Roll Call Votes in the European Parliament Shaun McGirr Endogenous Bureaucratic Discipline 18 1810 Preference Formation 2104 Political Economics Section: Political Economy Chair: Mark Andreas Kayser Discussant: Mark Andreas Kayser Room: Sem 10 Section: Multilevel Politics Chair: Ronny Freier Discussant: Jeffrey Timmons Room: Sem 12 Matt Golder, David Siegel, and Ben Gaskins Religious Participation and Economic Conservatism Bernard Steunenberg Budgetary decision-making as a multi-layered game: The interaction between spending departments and the Treasury Nathan M. Jensen and Rene Lindstaedt Global Discrimination: Anti-Foreign Sentiments and Foreign Direct Investment Elena Nikolova Labor Markets and Representative Institutions: Evidence from Colonial British America Lena Schaffer and Gabriele Spilker Ego- or Sociotropic: Using Survey Experiments to Understand Individuals' Trade Preferences Daniel Stegmueller The effect of cognitive and noncognitive skills on preferences for redistribution. Theresa Kuhn, Erika van Elsas, Armèn Hakhverdian and Wouter van der Brug An ever wider gap in an ever closer Union. Rising inequalities and euroscepticism in 12 West European democracies, 1976-2008 2007 Environmental Politics Baptiste Françon and Michaël Zemmour Political Economy of Unemployment Insurance: A Dynamic Perspective Section: States and Markets Chair: Jae-Jae Spoon Discussant: Catherine de Vries Room: Sem 1 2404 Voting Behavior Section: Politics and Society Chair: Robert Erikson Discussant: Robert Erikson Room: Sem 8 Florian Rabitz and Sebastian Oberthuer EU Leadership in Global Environmental Governance The Case of the Nagoya Protocol on Access and Benefit-Sharing Thorsten Faas and Johannes Blumenberg How to Measure Voting Intentions in Times of Growing Uncertainty and Volatility?: A Comparison of Feeling Thermometers, Propensities to Vote and Yet Another New Instrument Vally Koubi, Jacek Kugler, Tobias Böhmelt and Tadeusz Kugler Climate Change, Power Parity, and Civil Conflict Sarah Surak Pollution, Production, and Protection: Managing the Disposal of Waste Electronics in the European Union Mariana Skirmuntt The local roots of the participation gap: a multilevel analysis of non-electoral participation in English localities Jacob Sohlberg Political Elites and the Basis of European Attitudes on Climate Change Till Weber Critical cases: Assessing collinearity and synergy in spatial models of voting Sascha Huber Amiguity of Parties, Coalitions and Voting Behaviour 19 2505 (Counter-) Terrorism Julie Browne International War and Domestic Peace: A Model of Domestic Terrorism and Transnational War Section: Political Processes Chair: Mariaelisa Epifanio Discussant: Eric Neumayer Room: Sem 2 Jeffrey R. Weber and Christopher Boylan Up, Down, Left, Right: When Democracies are Targets of Terror Thomas Jensen National Responses to Transnational Terrorism: Intelligence and Counterterrorism Provision Tim Wegenast The impact of fuel ownership on intrastate violence 20 EPSA Best Paper Awards Starting with the 2013 conference, the European Political Science Association will honour the best papers of the previous conference in the following 5 categories: ------ European Political Science Association Best Paper Award The Emerging Young Scholar Award for the best paper written by authors whose Ph.D. was awarded after 2007. If the paper is co-authored, all authors need to meet the requirement. The LSE Methodology Institute Award for the best paper advancing political methodology. The Nuffield Paper Award for the best paper developing a novel theoretical argument. The Essex Summer School Award for the best empirical test of a theoretical argument. Nominations can be made by any scholar attending the 2012 EPSA meeting in Berlin – accordingly: selfnominations are possible and invited. Panel chairs and discussants are especially encouraged to nominate high quality papers to either on of the latter three categories (see below). The prices will be awarded by the EPSA council members. Each successful paper will win a €200 prize and be recognized at the 2013 meeting. EPSA 2012 Annual Conference Best Paper Awards nomination form Authors Paper Title LSE Methodology Institute Award Nuffield Paper Award Please nominate the paper only to one of the three categories. All nominated papers will automatically be considered for the EPSA best paper ward and, if applicable, also to the Emerging Young Scholars Award. Essex Summer School EITM Award 21 Friday, 8.30 – 10.15 1008 Decisions, Choice Sets and Vote Choices Stephen A. Meserve and Daniel Pemstein Deciding What They Google: the Political Determinants of Government Censorship Section: Electoral Politics Chair: Vit Simral Discussant: Rafael Hortala-Vallve Room: Sem 12 1206 Deterrence and Alliances Alessandro Nai The Cadillac, the mother-in-law, and the vote: how campaigning affects ambivalence on directdemocratic choices Section: International Politics Chair: Benjamin Goldsmith Discussant: Matthew Powers Room: Sem 10 Vit Simral Formateurs and Cabinet Formation in Western, Central, and Eastern Europe Erik Gartzke and Alex Weisiger A Socio-Rationalist Theory of Alliances Koji Kagotani and Takeshi Iida Find Your Weakness: Domestic Turmoil and Deterrence Failure Aiko Wagner Choices v Choice Sets Rune Karlsen and Bernt Aardal Ideological Predispositions, Party Set and Issue Ownership: How Stable and Dynamic Factors Affect Vote Choice Kelly M. Kadera and Vanessa Lefler Systemic Alliance Reliability and Incentives to Make New Commitments 1406 Violence against Civilians 1105 Political Regimes and their Effects Section: Domestic and International Conflict Chair: Barry Hashimoto Discussant: Michael Colaresi Room: Sem 9 Section: Comparative Politics Chair: Tina Freyburg Discussant: Helder Do Vale Room: Sem 8 Anita Gohdes Rebels and Repertoires: Examining strategies of violence against civilians in civil war Junko Kato and Seiki Tanaka Taxation without Representation? Explaining the Relationship between State Revenue Production and Regime Type Michael Fürstenberg "Fighting Abroad" - Extraterritorial Violence of NonState Actors Pierre Landry and Daniela Stockmann Crisis Management in an Authoritarian Regime: Media Effects during the Sichuan Earthquake in China Margit Bussmann and Lisa Hultman Rebel Funding and Violence against Civilians Sean Fox and Kristian Hoelscher From War to Social Violence? An exploration of the changing nature of violence in developing regions Karoline Bang Lindegaard Zoffmann and Mogens K. Justesen Political Regimes and AIDS in Africa: Does Democracy Fail? 22 1601 Ethnic, Social, and Group Identity 1902 Agenda Setters and Party Responsiveness Section: Behavioral Politics Chair: Anja Neundorf Discussant: Anja Neundorf Room: Kuppel N Section: Political Institutions and Decisions Chair: Christopher Kam Discussant: Christopher Kam Room: Plenar Dimitri Landa and Dominik Duell Social Identification and the Nature of Electoral Representation: A Laboratory Experiment Michael Becher Presidents, prime ministers and policy responsiveness Mariana Skirmuntt Assessing the effects of local ethnic distribution on non-electoral participation in urban England Jens Brandenburg and Caroline Wittig Constitutional Courts as Veto Players in Parliamentary Democracies: A Dynamic Bargaining Game Eric Dickson Struggles Over Symbols and Endogenous Group Norms Robert S. Erikson and Yair Ghitza Setting the Agenda Setter Adrienne LeBas An Experimental Approach to Violence and Ethnic Cues in Kenya Ron D. Lehrer Intra-Party Democracy and Party Responsiveness 2201 The Making of Germany 1804 Elections and the Economy Section: Political Systems Chair: Martin Ejnar Hansen Discussant: Holger Döring Room: Sem 1 Section: Political Economy Chair: Caitlin Milazzo Discussant: Caitlin Milazzo Room: Kuppel S Martin Ejnar Hansen Common Ideas or National Exceptionalism? Comparing Democratization through Constituent Assemblies in 1848-49 M. Socorro Puy Affecting Reelection Probability through Taxation Cassandra Grafström Endogenous Elections and the Economic Vote: Does Choosing Election Timing Actually Bolster Incumbent Electoral Prospects? Lucas Leemann and Isabela Mares From 'open secrets' to the secret ballot: The economic and political determinants of secret ballot reform Roland Kappe A Behavioral Model of Asymmetric Retrospective Voting Philip Manow, Valentin Schröder and Carsten Nickel Patterns of Parliamentarization: Executive-Legislative Interaction in the German Reichstag, 1890-1914 Paul W. Thurner, Andre Klima and Helmut Kuechenhoff Agricultural Structure and the Rise of the Nazi Party Reconsidered 23 2304 Politics: The Big Picture Section: Parties and Elections Chair: James Hollyer Discussant: James Hollyer Room: Sem 2 Graziella Castro (Re)Thinking Public Opinion and Democracy Alexei V. Zakharov The importance of economic issues in politics: A cross-country analysis Pablo Beramendi and David Rueda The Never Ending Turn: History, Institutions and Capitalism Peter Buisseret Parliamentarism or Presidentialism? 24 Friday, 10.30 – 12.15 1202 Foreign Aid 1 1503 Inference 1: Estimation and Inference Section: International Politics Chair: Matthew Winters Discussant: Matthew Winters Room: Sem 12 Section: Political Methodology Chair: Vera Troeger Discussant: Simon Hug Room: Sem 8 Benjamin E. Goldsmith, Yusaku Horiuchi and Terence Wood Doing Well by Doing Good: the Impact of PEPFAR On Global Public Opinion Curtis Signorino and Brenton Kenkel An Alternative Solution to the Heckman Selection Problem: Selection Bias as Functional Form Misspecification Bernhard Reinsberg Two Parties - Less Cake? Divided Government and Multilateral Aid Thomas Plümper and Eric Neumayer Model Uncertainty and Robustness Tests: Towards a New Logic of Statistical Inference Tobias Heinrich The Strategic Reneging on Foreign Aid Lucas Leemann Heckman Meets Signorino: Selection and Structure Carie A. Steele Disease Control and Donor Priorities: The Political Economy of Development Aid for Health Vera Troeger and Elias Dinas Bridging the gap between strength and validity with IV-Loess: How to increase the efficiency of weak continuous instruments 1302 Mechanisms of Representation in Europe 1602 Party Attachment and Partisan Knowledge Section: European Union Politics Chair: Lawrence Ezrow Discussant: Lawrence Ezrow Room: Plenar Section: Behavioral Politics Chair: Paul Kellstedt Discussant: Paul Kellstedt Room: Sem 9 Ece Ozlem Atikcan The Puzzle of Double European Union Referenda David Fortunato and Randolph T. Stevenson What do Voters Need to Know and What do we Measure? Monika Bartkowska Patterns of Representation -- Do Eastern and Western Europe Differ? Adriaan Luyten and Christophe Crombez Aggregate Party Identification in Germany: The Effects of Consumer Confidence and Government Approval Katjana Gattermann European political parties in the media: What kind of representation(s)? Guido Tiemann Projection and Bias. What Happens when Spatial Voting Models are Contaminated by Non-Spatial Inputs? Bernhard Weßels Political Representation in Europe: Issue Congruence a Product of Chance or Linkages? Iulia Cioroianu and Joshua Tucker Partisanship and Voter Perceptions of Party Positions: Evidence from Bulgaria 25 1803 Democratization 2106 The Politics of Differentiated European Integration Section: Political Economy Chair: Ron Rogowski Discussant: Ron Rogowski Room: Kuppel N Section: Multilevel Politics Chair: Christina Schneider Discussant: Christina Schneider Room: Kuppel S James R. Hollyer, B. Peter Rosendorff and James Raymond Vreeland Transparency and Democratic Transitions Frank Schimmelfennig, Dirk Leuffen and Berthold Rittberger The differentiated European integration of core state powers Carl Henrik Knutsen Democracy and Income Inequality Dirk Leuffen, Berthold Rittberger and Frank Schimmelfennig Assessing the impact of deliberation and information: an experiment in deliberative democracy José Fernández-Albertos and Victor Lapuente Democratization, Social-democracy, and Universalistic Policies Abel Escriba Folch, Covadonga Meseguer and Joseph Wright Funding the State or the Opposition? Remittances and Authoritarian Regime Survival Steffen Schneider and Achim Hurrelmann The Politicization of Regional Integration: Is the European Union Truly a Special Case? 2306 Turnout 2005 Fiscal Policy Section: Parties and Elections Chair: Iñaki Sagarzazu Discussant: Iñaki Sagarzazu Room: Sem 1 Section: States and Markets Chair: Bernhard Steunenberg Discussant: Robert J. Franzese Room: Sem 10 Marta Żerkowska-Balas Do spatial models of voting explain voter turnout? comparative analysis. Cristina Bodea and Masaaki Higashijima Central bank independence, fiscal policy and political institutions Patrick Bernhagen, Neil J. Mitchell and Marianne Thissen-Smits Corporate Citizens and the UN Global Compact: Explaining Cross-National Variations in Turnout M. Camilo Vial Political and fiscal decentralization in unitary states from South America: the cases of Bolivia, Chile, Colombia, Ecuador and Peru. Zsolt Kiss and Sara Hobolt Negative campaigning, emotions and political participation Mark Hallerberg Fiscal Federalism in the European Union and in the US During Times of Crisis Ed Fieldhouse, Laurence Lessard-Phillips and Bruce Edmonds The Complexity of Turnout: An Agent-Based Simulation of Electoral Participation Hanna Lierse and Laura Seelkopf Capital liberalization, government bonds and tax reforms 26 2406 The Individualization of Politics Section: Politics and Society Chair: David Karol Discussant: David Karol Room: Sem 2 Stephen Quinlan and Thomas Meyer The ever shrinking party logo: Personalization in Irish politics and the ever growing focus on individual candidates rather than political parties Pablo Fernandez-Vazquez Platform Choice by Vote-Maximizing Parties with Naïve and Non Naïve Voters: A Dynamic Computational Model Johan A. Elkink and Alexander Baturo Auctoritas or Potestas? Personal and Institutional Effects of Individual Political Influence Liam Weeks Why Independents? 27 Friday, 12.30 – 14.30 1005 Spatial Models of Voting, Abstention, and Polarization Constanza Sanhueza Petrarca How do Parties Politicize Immigration?: Argumentation Strategies in Party Manifestos in France and the United Kingdom Section: Electoral Politics Chair: Mauro Barisione Discussant: Pierro Stanig Room: Plenar Olena Bagno-Moldavsky Political newborns: the open model of socialization tested on immigrant populations in Germany, Israel and Ukraine Peter Grand and Guido Tiemann Determinants of Voter Turnout in EP and National Elections 1207 States, Systems, and Foreign Policy Toni Rodon Abstention because of indifference and alienation in different party scenarios Section: International Politics Chair: Michael Bechtel Discussant: Michael Bechtel Room: Sem 8 Jørgen Bølstad and Elias Dinas Not Just the Closest Party: Reconsidering the Directional Model of Voting Erik Gartzke Dissatisfied States Mauro Barisione Ideological Proximity and Voting Preferences in the European Electoral Cycle (1989-2009) Lee J.M. Seymour Reconsidering State Death in the Contemporary International System Guido Tiemann Choosing Policy, Compensating Consensus, or Pushing for Change Alejandro Quiroz Flores and Michael T. Koch Conflict Effort and Domestic Politics 1101 Migrant Networks and Immigration Control Mark David Nieman International Social Contract Theory: An Empirical Evaluation Section: Comparative Politics Chair: Lena Schaffer Discussant: Marc Helbling Room: Kuppel S 1402 Elections and Violence Section: Domestic and International Conflict Chair: Patrick M. Kuhn Discussant: Inken von Borzyskowski Room: Kuppel N Noelle Brigden A Tale of Two Migrant Hometowns: The Political Economy of Human Smuggling and Violence against Migrants Stefano Costalli and Andrea Ruggeri Do Bullets Affect Ballots? Civil war effects on voting behaviour Marc Helbling Framing immigration. Varieties of arguments, actors and opportunity structures Ursula Daxecker All Quiet on Election Day: International Election Observation and Incentives for Pre-Election Violence Mogens Hobolth Stemming the 'tide' of migrants and refugees? European visa-issuing practices in a cross-country perspective 28 Patrick M Kuhn When Ballots Spark Bullets: Explaining the Persistent Cross-National Variation in Campaign Violence in Sub-Saharan Africa, 1990-2007 Michio Umeda The Effect of Population Aging on Politics: Attitude and Saliency of Welfare Issue among the Old and the Young Thomas Edward Flores and Irfan Nooruddin War by Other Means: Elections and Political Development in Post-Conflict Countries Despina Alexiadou Old and New guard of Social-democrats and Employment Policy Ed Coughlan Electoral Violence in Sub-Saharan Africa: 1997-2010 Bob Hancke Labour unions, wages and monetary integration in continental Europe 1806 Fiscal Politics and Policy 2109 International Cooperation 2 Section: Political Economy Chair: David Soskice Discussant: James Alt Room: Sem 9 Section: Multilevel Politics Chair: Matthias Ecker-Erhardt Discussant: Andreas Dür Room: Sem 12 Galina Zudenkova A Model of Party Discipline in Congress Asif Efrat Preventing Plunder: The United States and UNESCO's Efforts against Looting of Antiquities Lucy M. Goodhart Becoming Red and Blue: The Economic Foundations of Political Diversity across American States Wolfgang Wagner and Michal Onderco Confrontation or Accomodation? EU members' policies towards Iran 2002-2009 Mark Hallerberg and Joachim Wehner The Competence of European Economic Policymakers Matthias Ecker-Ehrhardt Why Parties Politicize International Governance: On Globalization Backlash and Authority Contestation Luz Marina Arias Who Benefits from Redistribution? Fiscal Centralization and Government Expenditure in Spanish America Resat Bayer Ties that matter? Diplomatic Exchange Data from 1816 to 2010 2001 Welfare State and Social Protection Section: States and Markets Chair: Michael Zemmour Discussant: Pablo Beramendi Room: Sem 10 2305 Voting Section: Parties and Elections Chair: Till Weber Discussant: Alessandro Nai Room: Sem 1 Basak Kus Rethinking Politics of Inequality and Welfare: Bringing Consumption into the Picture Michaël Zemmour The Consequences of Fiscal Consolidation on Public Social Protection : a Comparatist Approach on Western Europe (1980-2009) Iñaki Sagarzazu Sergi Pardos-Prado Beyond self-interest: party discourse, economic saliency, and the vote 29 Raul Gomez All that you can(not) leave behind: How voteswitching evolves over the life-course. Verena Kroth Political Budget Cycles and Intergovernmental Transfers in a Dominant Party Framework: Empirical Evidence from South Africa Richard Johnston, Patrick Kraft, Julia Partheymüller and Rüdiger Schmitt-Beck Election Campaigns and 'Correct Voting' in a MultiParty System: A Study of the 2005 and 2009 German Federal Elections Simona Gurbo and Ilga Kreituse Politics and the Pulpit: Political Behaviour of Clergy in Latvia Robert Elgie and Christine Fauvelle-Aymar Economic voting under semi-presidentialism Adrian Miroiu, Andra Roescu, Mirela Vlasceanu and Irina Ionita Local-central level power relations and impact on the national budget. Evidence from Romania Carolina Plescia Split ticket voting: a theoretical and methodological investigation in two countries Amie Kreppel Autonomy and Influence: An Initial Test of a Comparative Theory of Legislative Power 2407 Insights from Cases: Governance Section: Politics and Society Chair: Verena Kroth Discussant: Ingo Rohlfing Room: Sem 2 Kerem Oge External remedies to Resource Abundance: The Limits of Transparency Promotion in Azerbaijan 30 Friday, 14.45 – 16.45 1002 New Developments in Economic Voting 1303 EU Treaty Reform Section: Electoral Politics Chair: Spyros Kosmidis Discussant: Sascha Huber Room: Kuppel N Section: European Union Politics Chair: Fabio Franchino Discussant: Fabio Franchino Room: Sem 9 Christine Fauvelle-Aymar and Mary Stegmaier The Stock Market and Government Approval Andreas Warntjen The elusive quest for continuity? Legislative Decision-Making in the Council and the Council Presidency before and after Lisbon Andrew Kerner The Ownership Society in Latin America: Pension Reform, Stock Markets and Economic Voting Spyros Kosmidis Electoral Accountability and Length of Office Tenure Thomas Duttle Determinants of differentiated integration across the EU member states: A test of liberalintergovernmentalist hypotheses Sean Carey and Matthew Lebo The effects of European integration on mediating the relationship between the economy and voting in Britain Thomas König and Daniel Finke Making the Lisbon Reform Work. From intergovernmental bargaining to presidential crisis management in the European Union 1104 Democratization and Democratic Stability Jan Biesenbender Nash revisited: Bargaining Power at EU Intergovernmental Conferences Section: Comparative Politics Chair: Ignacio Sánchez-Cuenca Discussant: Covadonga Meseguer Room: Plenar Janine Reinhard Argumentative Strategies in EU Constitutional Negotiations Nasos Roussias and Rubén Ruiz-Rufino Electoral Observation and the Promotion of Democracy: Wishful Thinking or Reality? 1507 Inference 3: Regression Discontinuity Section: Political Methodology Chair: Curtis Signorino Discussant: Dominik Hangartner Room: Sem 8 Simone Dietrich and Joseph Wright Foreign Aid and Political Development in Africa Sonja Grimm Elites in transition after war: a neglected dimension Weizhun Mao Can International Trade Institutions Promote Peace? A Regression Discontinuity Design Test on GATT/WTO Ignacio Sánchez-Cuenca Elite Coordination in Spanish democratization Tina Freyburg Building-up Democracies rather than Breaking-down Autocracies: A Time-sensitive Approach to EU Democracy Promotion Leonardo Baccini and Maria Laura Sudulich Lost in Transmission: Evaluating Media Bias Towards the European Union 31 Leandro de Magalhaes Incumbency Advantage in Brazilian Mayoral Elections: A Regression Discontinuity Design 1904 Party Politics and Legislative Dynamics in Italy Section: Political Institutions and Decisions Chair: Francesco Zucchini Discussant: Ken Benoit Room: Sem 2 Albert Solé-Ollé, Pilar Sorribas-Navarro and Marta Curto-Grau The returns to partisan alignment between regional and local governments Daniel Berger Do Chiefs Matter? Village leadership and harvests since 1982 Luigi Curini Strategic valence competition in a multiparty system. A spatial application to the Italian case from 1946 to 2008 1801 Bureaucracy and Policy Reform Licia C.Papavero and Francesco Zucchini A gendered spatial analysis of legislative preferences in the Italian parliament Section: Political Economy Chair: Despina Alexiadou Discussant: Despina Alexiadou Room: Kuppel S Daniela Giannetti, Aldo Di Virgilio and Luca Pinto Patterns of party switching in the Italian Chamber of Deputies 2008-2011 Simon Lüchinger, Mark Schelker and Alois Stutzer Governance, Bureaucratic Rents and Well-Being Differentials Across U.S. States Andrea Pedrazzani Government-opposition dynamics, intracoalition conflict, or distributive logic? An analysis of the length of Italian legislative process (1987-2006) Soo Yeon Kim and Mark Manger Models of Governance: Second-Order Effects of US and EU RTAs Valentino Larcinese Enfranchisement and Representation: Italy 19091913 Mircea Popa Rent Seeking in 19th Century Britain 2108 International Cooperation 1 Susumu Shikano and Markus Tepe Learning to Get the Job Done? An Experimental Analysis of Learning Processes in the Repeated Oversight Game Section: Multilevel Politics Chair: Erik Gartzke Discussant: Nikitas Konstantinidis Room: Sem 12 Jonathan Smiles Measuring Legislative Outcomes - A Comparative Analysis Erik Gartzke Contracts Between Friends?: Alliances, Reputation, and International Politics Barbara Dluhosch and Daniel Horgos (When) Does Tit-for-Tat Diplomacy in Trade Policy Pay Off? Håvard Hegre, Lisa Hultman and Håvard Mokleiv Nygård Evaluating the conflict-reducing effect of UN peacekeeping operations 32 Christian Arnold, Gerard van den Berg and Bettina Drepper Inefficiencies from Strategic Behaviour in International Cooperation - Evidence from the Southern Common Market 2506 Decentralization Section: Political Processes Chair: Michael Tatham Discussant: Oliver Dlabac Room: Sem 10 Jeff Colgan The Emperor Has No Clothes: The Limits of OPEC in the Oil Market Cristina Ares Castro-Conde The Europeanization of local governance in Spain 2202 Electoral System Reform Gemma Mateo and Andreas Dür Inside versus Outside Lobbying: Interest Group Strategies in the EU and Its Member States Section: Political Systems Chair: Pedro Riera Discussant: Debora Sichel Room: Sem 1 Anna Ramon and Marina Carrión Looking at policy implementation through social networks Damien Bol Values or Interests? Developing and Testing a Proximity Model of Parties' Support for Electoral Reforms Michael Tatham and Michael Bauer Playing with the grown-ups: the determinants of regional influence on EU decision-taking Albert Falcó-Gimeno The Allocation of Regional Cabinet Ministries under Decentralization Philipp Harfst The Consequences of Electoral System Changes in Central and Eastern European Democracies: Analysing the Effects of Institutional Change. Joachim Behnke The new German Electoral System and its Possible Consequences Irina Ionita, Andra Roescu, Mirela Vlasceanu Comparing the effects of voting rules in the Romanian context. An experimental design Pedro Riera Principles, Pragmatism and Electoral Performance: Does it pay off to support the 'right' electoral reform? 33 Friday, 17.00 – 18.45 1304 Careers, Roles and Networks 1701 Policy Agendas Section: European Union Politics Chair: Bjørn Høyland Discussant: Jos Elkink Room: Kuppel N Section: Public Policy Chair: Marco Simoni Discussant: Marco Simoni Room: Plenar José Real-Dato and Javier Alarcón-González The relevance of the European Parliament in political careers: evidence from the Spanish MEPs (19862011) Shaun Bevan and Peter John Policy representation and Prime Minister's Questions: institutional rules and party politics in the United Kingdom Simon Hix and Bjørn Høyland Career Considerations and Legislative Behavior in the European Parliament Martial Foucault and Fabrizio Gilardi The Determinants of Policy Punctuations Nathalie Giger and Heike Kluever Focusing events and policy change: The aftermath of Fukushima Lukas Obholzer and Michael Kaeding Representatives of whom? Party group coordinators in the European Parliament Anthony Bertelli and Peter John Political Capital and the Content of the Speech from the Throne in Britain Paul W. Thurner, Marcel Kiel and Micha Schneider Committee Networks in the European Parliament: Structure and Impact on the Allocation of Reports 1805 Financial Crisis 1607 Strategic Voting Section: Political Economy Chair: Michael Courtney Discussant: Achim Goerres Room: Sem 8 Section: Behavioral Politics Chair: Raymond Duch Discussant: Niall Hughes Room: Kuppel S Benny Geys and Jan Vermeir Party Cues in Elections under Multilevel Governance: Theory and Evidence from US States Michael F. Meffert and Thomas Gschwend Explaining Strategic Coalition Voting: Policy or Affect? Michael Bechtel, Jens Hainmueller and Yotam Margalit Who Wants to Bail Out Other Countries and Why? David Johann, Thomas Meyer and Markus Wagner The narcissism of small differences? Distinguishing between spatial models of vote choice James Alt, David Dreyer Lassen and Joachim Wehner Politics, Economics, and Fiscal Gimmicks in OECD Countries, 1990-2010 Daniel Schultz Random Acts of Sophisticated Voting? - How much do citizens need to know to cast a strategic vote? Stefanie Walter Distributional Politics in Times of Crisis. Eastern European Policy Responses to the 2008-10 Global Economic Crisis Ray Duch and Rafael Hortala-Vallve Coalition directed voting in the laboratory 34 1901 Westminster 2006 Debt and Deficit Section: Political Institutions and Decisions Chair: Ken Shotts Discussant: Ken Shotts Room: Sem 9 Section: States and Markets Chair: Cristina Bodea Discussant: Cristina Bodea Room: Sem 10 Liam Weeks and Peter Tucker Maxima minima sunt? The role of independent MPs in Westminster democracy Susan Fuchs and Alexander Katsaitis Not All Conflict is in the Council: Intra- and Interinstitutional Variation in EU Perspectives on the Eurozone Debt Crisis Andrew Eggers and Arthur Spirling Partisan Convergence in Executive-Legislative Interactions: Modeling Debates in the House of Commons, 1832--1915 Miguel Glatzer The Euro Crisis: External Actors, Budgetary Politics and Fundamental Reform in Southern Europe Samuel Berlinski, Torun Dewan and Brenda Van Coppenolle Franchise Extension and the British Aristocracy Thomas Schaeubli The Political Economy of European Monetary Convergence, 1972-2010 Hande Mutlu-Eren Intra-Party Dynamics and Pork-Barrel Politics: The Allocation of Housing Grants in Britain 2303 Party Cohesion Section: Parties and Elections Chair: Federico Vegetti Discussant: Federico Vegetti Room: Sem 12 2003 Lobbying Section: States and Markets Chair: Mark Manger Discussant: Kevin L. Young Room: Sem 1 Andrea Ceron The Politics of Fission: Analysis of Faction Breakaways among Italian Parties (1946-2010) Patrick Bernhagen and Thomas Bräuninger Lobbying, Information Asymmetry, and Groups' Influence over Public Policy Katjana Gattermann Winner or ignoramus? The European Parliament's incentives for inter-parliamentary co-operation Benjamin Barber IV, Simon Weschle and Jan Pierskalla "Who Lobbies? Evidence from a Cross-National Enterprise Survey" Raimondas Ibenskas Marriages of Love or Interest? Party Mergers in Established and New European Democracies Alexandra Cirone Eurocrats, Technocrats, and Politicians: Strategic Lobbying Stefano Pagliari and Kevin L. Young Leveraged Interests: Financial Industry Power and the Role of Private Sector Coalitions' 35 2410 Leaders and Leadership Christoffer Green-Pedersen, Sara B. Hobolt, Robert Klemmensen and Peter B. Mortensen Political Attention and Ministerial Structure: The Changing Nature of the Executive Section: Politics and Society Chair: Florence So Discussant: Florence So Room: Sem 2 Alexander Baturo and Slava Mikhaylov Reading the Tea Leaves: Uncovering Elite Preferences about Medvedev's Presidency Through Political Rhetoric of Federal and Subnational Actors Lucile Eznack and Alessandro Nai From individuals to group leaders. Propositions for a multilevel framework on the role of emotion in politics Philipp Köker Presidential Activism in Central and Eastern Europe (CEE): A statistical analysis of the use of presidential vetoes in the CEE EU member states, 1990-2010 Advertisement The British Election Study The British Election Study (BES) has been conducted at every General Election since 1964. Its main goal is to describe and to explain why people vote, why they vote as they do, the election outcome and the consequences of elections for democracy in Britain. proudly sponsors EPSA’s Thursday reception. The BES is funded by the Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC) UK. 36 Saturday, 8.30 – 10.15 1006 Electoral Systems and Party Competition 1307 Decision-making in the Council of Ministers Section: Electoral Politics Chair: Patrick Bernhagen Discussant: Patrick Bernhagen Room: Kuppel N Section: European Union Politics Chair: Wim van Aken Discussant: Wim van Aken Room: Sem 8 Yael Shomer Institutional reforms and their effect on legislators' behavior: the Israeli experience, 1992-2011. James P. Cross Legislative transparency and censorship in the Council of Ministers of the European Union Andra-Maria Roescu Constraints and implications of a multilevel electoral system. Evidence from Romania Frank M. Häge Coalition Building Dynamics in the Council of the European Union Valentin Schröder Making Candidates Count and Still Preserving the System: Pre-electoral Coordination among Parties in German Reichstag Elections, 1890-1912 Stéphanie Novak Transparency versus accountability? The case of the EU Council of ministers. Thomas Malang and Dirk Leuffen Explaining the Salience of Small Member States in EU Decision Making Kamil Marcinkiewicz and Markus Tepe Mandates, parties and positions: A quantitative analysis of self-reported biographical texts of German MPs 1504 Survey Designs 1204 International Institutions: Dynamics and Externalities Section: Political Methodology Chair: Levente Littvay Discussant: Gregory J. Martin Room: Plenar Section: International Politics Chair: Autumn Lookwood Payton Discussant: Alton B.H. Worthington Room: Sem 12 Marco Meyer, Robert Greszki and Harald Schoen Quick and dirty? Speeding in web surveys of onlinepanelists and freshly recruited respondents Asif Efrat Designing International Agreements: Evidence from the International Regulation of Small Arms Levente Littvay and Till Weber Quasi-Experimental Methods to Test Survey Bias: Mode effects, country variance and extreme response style in the 2009 European Election Study Federica Genovese The international climate change negotiations unpacked: exploring a new dataset Juli F. Minoves-Triquell Monarchy and the Public: a six-country survey Christos Kourtelis Lobbying for cooperation? The Euro-Mediterranean relations as a three-level game Julian Aichholzer Changing survey mode in a panel study: Who exhibits different response styles? Autumn Lockwood Payton Voting from the Sidelines: The Effects Informal Voting in International Organizations 37 1603 Decision-Making 2302 Incumbency Advantage Section: Behavioral Politics Chair: Jon H. Fiva Discussant: Jon H. Fiva Room: Sem 10 Section: Parties and Elections Chair: Slava Mikhaylov Discussant: Slava Mikhaylov Room: Kuppel S Jessie Tarlov, Nick Vivyan and Markus Wagner Does bad news reduce bias? Informational environment, partisan attachments and voter perceptions of political misconduct Ozge Kemahlioglu Partisan Incumbency Advantage and Democracy: Municipal Level Analysis of Elections in Chile and Turkey Andreas Murr The dynamics of citizen forecasting: How do citizens combine new information with old beliefs? Diana Elena Burlacu When Does the Circle Break? Good Governance vs. Support for the Incumbent Andreas Fleig and Daniel Finke Motivated by the Process: How Decision-Making Procedures Shape the Motivation Function Under Majority Rule Ignazio De Ferrari Party and Executive Evaluations across Political Systems: A Multilevel-Model Approach Ozge Kemahlioglu and Elif Ozdemir Partisan Ties as Incumbency Advantage in the Nascent Predominant Party System of Turkey Roland Kappe Modeling Reference Point Dependent Behavior Using Threshold Models 2405 Agenda Formation 1807 Foreign Aid 2 Section: Politics and Society Chair: Natalie Giger Discussant: Anthony Bertelli Room: Sem 1 Section: Political Economy Chair: Tobias Heinrich Discussant: Bernhard Reinsberg Room: Sem 9 Patrik Marier The Politicization of Pension Agencies and its Impact on Reform Proposals Cesi Cruz and Christina Schneider The (Unintended) Electoral Effects of Multilateral Aid Projects Christian Rauh Driving or being driven? Public politicisation and position formation in the EU Commission Susanne Michalik and Laura Seelkopf Partisanship and foreign aid allocation Matthew S. Winters and Gina Martinez The Role of Corruption in Determining Foreign Aid Project Portfolios Sara B. Hobolt, Jae-Jae Spoon, and Catherine E. De Vries The Dynamics of the Issue Space: The Evolution of the Environmental Issue in Europe Tobias Heinrich and Matt Loftis Foreign aid and the quality of the candidate pool Thomas J. Scotto, and Jason Reifler Audience Costs: Domestic, International, and Across the Poind 38 2408 Insights from Cases: Voting Section: Politics and Society Chair: Brenda van Coppenolle Discussant: Damien Bol Room: Sem 2 Bernd Beber, Philip Roessler, and Alexandra Scacco Identity in Partition: New Survey Evidence from Sudan Brenda Van Coppenolle Political Dynasties and the 2010 Belgian general election Pablo Barberá A New Measure of Party Identification in Twitter. Evidence from Spain. David P. Redlawsk, William W. Cohen, Douglas Pierce, Ramnath Balasubramanyan, and Tae Yano Rational Updating in the Face of Incongruent Candidate Information 39 Saturday, 10.30 – 12.15 1007 Candidate and Leader Influences on Voters 1509 Inference 4: Advanced Methods Section: Electoral Politics Chair: Caitlin Milazzo Discussant: Guillermo Rosas Room:Sem 8 Section: Political Methodology Chair: Jens Hainmueller Discussant: Jude Hays Room: Kuppel N John Barry Ryan Candidate Ambiguity, Social Networks, and Correct Voting Jens Hainmueller and Chad Hazlett Kernel Regularized Least Squares: Moving Beyond Linearity and Additivity without Sacrificing Interpretability Kyle Mattes and Caitlin Milazzo Predicting Election Outcomes using Trait Assessments of British Parliamentary Candidates Robert Greszki and Zoltán Juhász The Influence of Mode Effects on the Adjustment of Data Generated from Non-Probability Online Access Panels Florence So Party Leadership Replacement in Parliamentary Democracies Daniel Stegmueller Modeling dynamic preferences. A Bayesian dynamic latent ordered probit model Christoph Sajons Is Bob the Banker more electable than Bob the Builder? The effect of candidate profession on voter satisfaction and behavior in open- list elections Andrew D. Martin and Kevin M. Quinn Approximate Bayesian Computation for Complex Models 1203 Keeping the Natives at Bay 1604 Social and Political Institutions Section: International Politics Chair: Julian Wucherpfennig Discussant: Julian Wucherpfennig Room: Sem 9 Section: Behavioral Politics Chair: Philip Manow Discussant: Philip Manow Room: Kuppel S Vally Koubi, Lena Schaffer, Gabriele Spilker and Thomas Bernauer Environmental Degradation and Migration Daniel Rubenson, Peter Loewen and Richard Sawyer Property Rights, Beliefs and Values: Evidence From a Field Experiment in Mongolia Andrea Ruggeri, Ismene T. Gizelis and Han Dorussen Sub-national Dynamics of UN Peacekeeping Alan S. Gerber, Gregory A. Huber, David Doherty and Conor M. Dowling Social Judgments and Political Participation: Estimating the Consequences of Social Rewards and Sanctions for Voting Inken von Borzyskowski Sore Losers? International Influences on PostElection Violence Michael Colaresi Embedded Conflict: Understanding the Relationship Between Civil and International Competition Without Contradictory Assumptions Eric Dickson, Sanford Gordon and Greg Huber Legitimacy and Enforcement: A Public Goods Experiment 40 Richard Traunmueller The Dynamic Effects of Social Context on Political Preferences in Germany 2103 International Money and Finance 1702 Social Policy Section: Multilevel Politics Chair: Lucy Goodhart Discussant: Lucy Goodhart Room: Sem 1 Section: Public Policy Chair: Michael Zemmour Discussant: Michael Zemmour Room: Plenar Meredith Wilf A Stake in the International: The Distributional Implications of Basel III Regulatory Announcements upon Financial Services Firms Elena Nikolova and Elena Loukoianova Representative Institutions and Public Goods: Evidence from the US, 1860-1915 Sebastián Lavezzolo Political Lending: The Case of Spanish Saving Banks Till Cordes Sovereign Ratings and Economic Liberalisation Marco Simoni and Timothee Vlandas Institutional and Political Determinants of Dualization Jonas Bunte Why do some developing countries borrow from China, while others do not? Achim Kemmerling The End of Work or Work Without End? The Causes and Consequences of Beliefs about Labour Market Policies 2403 Two-Level Games? Institutional Influences on Politics Scott Powell Social Policy and (Un)Social Partners: The Role of Labor Unions in Employment Policy Reform Section: Politics and Society Chair: Nick Vivyan Discussant: Nick Vivyan Room: Sem 2 1905 Checks and Balances Valentino Larcinese, Riccardo Puglisi and James M. Snyder Jr. Bad News on Italian TV: Agenda Bias on Italian TV News Broadcasts during the Berlusconi Era Section: Political Institutions and Decisions Chair: Hande Mutlu-Eren Discussant: Hande Mutlu-Eren Room: Sem 10 Patrick Le Bihan Popular Referendum and Electoral Accountability Katjana Gattermann and Sofia Vasilopoulou Two level games? Fringe Eurosceptic parties and the media Thomas König and Bernd Luig The Conditionality of Parliamentary Oversight: Ministerial Gatekeeping and Party Pivots in in the Implementation Process of Directives Javier Sajuria Is the Internet changing our concept of Democracy? An analysis of the Internet Use during protests and its effect on the perception of democracy. Anthony Bertelli Bureaucratic Perceptions of Discretion in the Separation of Powers, 1998-2004 Benjamin G. Engst and Christoph Hönnige Reaching the Mountains Peak: Judicialization and its limits in France Torun Dewan and Rafael Hortala-Vallve The cabinet and its shadow 41 2409 Voter Sophistication and Behavior Section: Politics and Society Chair: Olena Bagno-Moldavsky Discussant: Olena Bagno-Moldavsky Room: Sem 12 Heiko Giebler Elections in multi-layered systems: The impact of relational salience on individual electoral behaviour Markus Wagner Fear and anger in Great Britain: the political sources and consequences of emotional reactions to the financial crisis Marc Helbling What triggers opposition towards immigration? Results from an online experiment on the impact of economic and cultural cues Kristel Jacquier Public Support for the European Union: a Comparative Analysis 42 Saturday, 12.30 – 14.30 1102 Electoral Systems and Political Appointment Miriam Hartlapp Position Formation in the EU Commission: Theorizing internal dynamics Section: Comparative Politics Chair: Holger Döring Discussant: Dominik Duell Room: Sem 9 Tanja Dannwolf Enforcing Transposition with the Help of the Public. A Study of the European Commission's Decisions in the Infringement Procedure. David Nachmias, Maoz Rosenthal and Hani Zubida Inverted First and Second-Order Elections: A Theory and Some Evidence from the Israeli Case 1403 Ethnic Conflict Timothy Frye, Ora John Reuter, Noah Buckley and Guzel Garifullina The Political Economy of Russian Gubernatorial Election and Appointment Section: Domestic and International Conflict Chair: Sean Fox Discussant: Sean Fox Room: Plenar Holger Döring and Philip Manow Electoral rules and the party composition of governments: Why are there social democratic and liberal welfare states? Heidrun Bohnet Concentrated refugee settlements and conflict Sebastian Schutte Ethnicized Conflict: From Fallujah to Sarajevo Emrah Uyar Electoral Systems and Distribution of Ideological Preferences: A New Approach to the "Ideological Congruence Controversy" Stefan Lindemann Ethnic exclusion and the puzzle of diverging conflict trajectories: case study evidence from Africa, Asia and Latin America 1305 The European Commission decides Kristin Bakke, Kathleen Cunningham and Lee J.M. Seymour Divided we Stand: Explaining Cohesion and Fragmentation in Ethnopolitical Movements Section: European Union Politics Chair: Benny Geys Discussant: Robert Thomson Room: Sem 10 Michel Goyer Institutional Diversity and ethnic Discrimination: The Case of Second/Third Generation Muslims in France Zuzana Murdoch and Benny Geys Instrumental Calculation, Cognitive Role-Playing, or Both? Self-Perceptions of Seconded National Experts in the European Commission 1508 Applied Methodological Advances Henrik Hermansson Stakeholder influence through the European Commission's consultations - expertise, access, bias Section: Political Methodology Chair: Lukas Stoetzer Discussant: Benjamin Lauderdale Room: Kuppel N Marco Mainenti Conditional regulatory independence: the determinants of the European Commission's decisions on state aid Gerald Schneider and Hanja Blendin Deterrence under Stress: Experimental Tests of Crisis Bargaining Models 43 Bjørn Høyland and Håvard Mokleiv Nygård Missing Uncertainty and Uncertain Missing in the Study of Civil War Onset Sonia Alonso, Laura Cabeza and Braulio Gómez Political Devolution: the Never-Ending Story? Torun Dewan and Francesco Squintani Party Factions and Platform Design: An Information Aggregation Approach Eva Zeglovits and Martina Zandonella Voting for a radical right party - evidence from a psychologist's point of view Nolan McCarty Complexity, Capacity, and Capture Teemu Lyytikäinen and Janne Tukiainen Voters are rational - A regression discontinuity test for the rational voting hypothesis Enriqueta Aragones, Micael Castanheira and Marco Giani Electoral Competition through Issue Selection Lukas Stoetzer The Updating Model of Issue Voting David P Myatt Extending the Rational-Choice Theory of Turnout: Voter Idiosyncrasy, Faction Heterogeneity, and Candidate Positioning 1705 Cops, Guns, and Women Section: Public Policy Chair: Fabrizio Gilardi Discussant: Thomas Däubler Room: Kuppel S 2205 Coalitions 2 Fabrizio Gilardi The Effects of Women's Political Representation Section: Political Systems Chair: Sven-Oliver Proksch Discussant: Indridi Indridason Room: Sem 8 Markus Tepe and Pieter Vanhuysse Cops for Hire? The Political Timing of Police Employment in German States, 1992-2008 Patrick Dunleavy and Christopher Dunleavy The Field of Power Thomas Däubler, Marc Debus and Jochen Müller Battle over bases: German military reform between partisan interests and economic constraints Zoltán Fazekas Personality traits and attitudes towards coalition formation and government Isabelle Engeli, Francesca Gains and Claire Annesley Turning words into action: Gendering policy outcomes in Western Europe Heike Kluever and Radoslaw Zubek Legislative Pledges and Coalition Government: Evidence from Poland, 2008-2011 Massimiliano G. Onorato, Kenneth Scheve and David Stasavage Technology and the Era of the Mass Army Matt Loftis The Politics of Output and Venue Choice in Coalition Policy Making 1906 Formal Theory 1 Sona N. Golder and Garrett Glasgow A New Approach to Studying the Likelihood of Parties Joining Governments Section: Political Institutions and Decisions Chair: Torun Dewan Discussant: Andrew Eggers Room: Sem 2 44 2307 Accountability 2503 Public Opinion and Risk Section: Parties and Elections Chair: Stéphanie Novak Discussant: Spyros Kosmidis Room: Sem 12 Section: Political Processes Chair: Soo Yeon Kim Discussant: Soo Yeon Kim Room: Sem 1 Miquel Pellicer and Eva Wegner Accountability in Dominant Party Systems: Exploring the Role of Term Limits in South Africa Fabio Franchino and Luigi Curini Priors, belief updating and attitudes to nuclear power risk Mark Schelker Lame Ducks and Divided Government: How Voters Control the Unaccountable Alexander Horn Beyond Left and Right? The Effect of Market Ideology and Welfare Ideology on the Politics of Risk Privatization in the OECD Rubén Ruiz-Rufino Surviving in government. How electoral rules explain pre-electoral harassment Alexander Glantz, Matthias Mader and Jana Pötzschke Predispositions and Public Support for the War in Afghanistan in Germany Jessica Fortin and Philipp Harfst Do Different Degrees of Electoral Integrity Affect Satisfaction with Democracy and Efficacy? Udi Sommer and Olga Frishman Institutional Isomorphism in Constitutional Courts: Translated Opinions as Means and Products of Transnational Judicial Dialogue Pablo Barbera-Aranguena, Pablo Fernandez-Vazquez and Gonzalo Rivero-Rodriguez Not all corruption scandals are equally punished in elections. Evidence from Spanish municipalities, 2003-2011 45 Saturday, 14.45 – 16.45 1003 Welfare Preferences, Policies, and Electoral Choice Mayling Birney Objective-Maximizing Authoritarianism: Evidence from China Section: Electoral Politics Chair: Daniel Stegmueller Discussant: Matt Golder Room: Sem 8 Andrew Little Coordination, Coups, and Civilian Control of the Military Catherine E. de Vries and Sara B. Hobolt Do Voters Blame Governments for Cuts in Social Spending? Evidence from a Natural Experiment 1106 Political Representation Anja Neundorf and Stuart Soroka Beyond individual characteristics: Explaining generational differences in redistribution preferences Section: Comparative Politics Chair: Michael D. McDonald Discussant: Stephen Meserve Room: Sem 9 Agnes Blome The impact of electoral demand and party competition on policy change. Family policy reforms in Germany and Italy Lawrence Ezrow and Tim Hellwig Globalization and Mean Voter Representation in Established Democracies Mark Andreas Kayser and Rene Lindstaedt The Essence of Electoral Systems: A Universal Approach to Studying Electoral Competitiveness and Representation Florian Foos Heterogeneity, voting and abstention in the Two Americas: How perceptions of growing income inequality influence the turnout decision Kenneth Benoit and Alexander Herzog Intra-Party Conflict Over Fiscal Austerity Measures François Facchini and Mickael Melki Ideological crisis and Electoral Volatility in France (1879 - 2011) Michael D. McDonald A Research Program for the Study of Political Representation 1103 Understanding Authoritarian Political Rule 1405 Violence, Democracy, and Democratization Section: Comparative Politics Chair: Bert Hoffmann Discussant: Andrew Little Room: Plenar Section: Domestic and International Conflict Chair: Gerald Schneider Discussant: Erik Gartzke Room: Kuppel S Alexander Schmotz and Dag Tanneberg Authoritarian Survival: Patterns of Persistence and Change under Dictatorship Paulina Pospieszna and Gerald Schneider The Illusion of 'Peace Through Power Sharing': Constitutional Choices in the Shadow of Civil War Dag Tanneberg and Alexander Schmotz The Carrot and the Stick: The Interdependence of Cooptation and Repression in the Stabilization of Autocratic Regimes Burcu Savun and Scott Cook Authoritarian Regimes, Democratization, and Civil Conflict 46 Håvard Hegre and Håvard Mokleiv Nygård Governance and Conflict Relapse Christine Gutekunst and Kaj Thomsson Coalition Formation with Heterogeneous Agents in International Public Goods Negotiations Nils W. Metternich and Julian Wucherpfennig Endogenous Post-Conflict Institutions, Ethnicity, and Civil War Recurrence: A Copula Based Approach Irene Menendez How governments cope: openness, regions and compensation Christian Houle, Mark Kayser and Jun Xiang Diffusion or Confusion: International Shocks and Democratization Hanna Lierse Public support for taxing the rich: what explains cross-national differences? 1506 Inference 2: Identification 2107 EU Decision Making Section: Political Methodology Chair: Andrew Martin Discussant: Eric Dickson Room: Kuppel N Section: Multilevel Politics Chair: Amie Kreppel Discussant: Amie Kreppel Room: Sem 10 Gregory J Martin Estimating the Informational Content of Campaign Advertising Mareike Kleine Knowing Your Limits: Political Judgment and Authority in the EU and Beyond Per Pettersson-Lidbom, Björn Tyrefors Hinnerich and Kåre Vernby Civic Engagement in Representative and Assembly Democracies Dorte Sindbjerg Martinsen and Mads Dagnis Jensen The timing of scrutiny. National parliaments and the new temporal rules of the European Union Mark Kayser and Shanker Satyanath Fairytale Growth: Culture and the Production Function Adriana Bunea Who asks what, when and how? Explaining interest groups' policy preferences in the EU policymaking. Jens Hainmueller and Dominik Hangartner Does Direct Democracy Hurt Immigrant Minorities? Quasi-Experimental Evidence from Naturalization Decisions in Switzerland Daniel Finke and Tanja Dannwolf Domestic Scrutiny of European Union Politics: Between Whistle Blowing and Opposition Control Wim Van Aken Decision Making in the Council of the European Union 1808 The Logic of Government Section: Political Economy Chair: Alejandro Quiroz Flores Discussant: Stefanie Walter Room: Sem 1 2207 Individual Careers in Politics Section: Political Systems Chair: Markus Tepe Discussant: Markus Tepe Room: Sem 12 Alejandro Quiroz Flores A Model of the Political Economy of Expropriation Sanford C. Gordon and Dimitri Landa Polarization and Cross-Cutting Cleavages Klaus Broesamle Misery as a stepping stone: How violent conflicts and natural disasters accelerate diplomats' careers 47 Jan-Hinrik Meyer-Sahling and Mona Morgan-Collins The tenure of ministers in post-communist democracies 2502 Political Violence Section: Political Processes Chair: Ursula Daxecker Discussant: Stefano Costalli Room: Sem 2 Stefanie Bailer, Peter Meissner, Peter Selb and Tamaki Ohmura Parliamentary Career Types and their influence on legislative positions and attitudes Benjamin E. Goldsmith, Dimitri Semenovich and Arcot Sowmya Forecasting Political Instability and Mass Killing: A two-stage approach Holger Döring and Sebastian Jäckle Office alternation in parliamentary democracies: Cabinets, parties and prime ministers compared David Karol Showing their Hands: Explaining Why Members of Congress Announce their Retirements Earlier and Earlier in the Electoral Cycle. Karsten Donnay, Dirk Helbing, Dan Miodownik and Ravi Bhavnani Spatio-Temporal Dynamics of Violence in Jerusalem Luis de la Calle and Ignazio Sanchez-Cuenca Fighting the War in Two Fronts: Shining Path and the Peruvian Civil War, 1980-1995. Patrick M. Kuhn Bullets for You and Cash for Others: On Perpetrators and Targets of Campaign Violence Jule Krüger Modelling the Reporting of Conflict Fatalities: Insights from Sierra Leone 48 Saturday, 17.00 – 18.30 1809 Welfare State and Labor Markets 2101 Crisis and Education Section: Political Economy Chair: Georg Vanberg Discussant: Bob Hancke Room: Sem 8 Section: Multilevel Politics Chair: Paul Kellstedt Discussant: Miguel Glatzer Room: Sem 10 Jerry Nicklesburg, and Jeffrey F. Timmons Specific Skilled Labor and the Demand For Insurance Michael Franke State intervention in times of the global economic crisis Lanny Martin and Georg Vanberg Multiparty Government, Fiscal Institutions, and Public Spending Ray Duch, Paul Kellstedt and Katsunori Seki The Political Economy of Global Economic Shocks and Consumer Confidence William B. Heller Parties, Preference Aggregation, and Policy: An Institutional Perspective on the Welfare State Frank-Borge Wietzke The Long Shadow of History: 19th Century Missionaries, Educational Mobility, and School Investments in Madagascar Ronny Freier and Florian Ade When can we trust population thresholds in regression discontinuity designs? - An analysis of the effect of legislative size on fiscal spending Mirela Vlasceanu Funding Policies in Romanian Higher Education 2004 Tax Morale 2204 Gender and Political Representation Section: States and Markets Chair: David Hugh-Jones Discussant: David Hugh-Jones Room: Sem 9 Section: Political Systems Chair: Daniel Kselman Discussant: Daniel Kselman Room: Sem 12 Nikolaos Biziouras and John Miller The Few, The Favored: Regime Demographics and Tax Capacity in Developing Countries Mirjam Allik Welfare state, within gender differences and women's political representation Theresa Kuhn and Jørgen Bølstad Triangulating experimental and survey research on cross-national differences in tax morale Maciej Gorecki and Paula Kukolowicz Gender and Candidates' Electoral Fortunes in Proportional Representation Systems: Evidence from Poland Adrienne LeBas Trust and Taxation in Urban Nigeria Stephen Meserve, Daniel Pemstein, and William Bernhard Gender and Candidate Nomination in European Elections 49 Restaurants in Walking Distance from the Venue 1 Sauerkraut und Bulgur Straße der Pariser Kommune 35 | 10243 Berlin Restaurant und Bar +49 30 29 77 36 31 | www.sauerkrautundbulgur.de 2 Block-House Karl-Marx-Allee 91 | 10243 Berlin Steak-Restaurant +49 30 422 47 73 | www.block-house.de 3 Umspannwerk Palisadenstraße 48 | 10243 Berlin ehem. Umspannwerk +49 30 420 893 23 | www.umspannwerk-ost.de 4 erdton Friedenstraße 39 | 10243 Berlin Café und Restaurant +49 30 420 291 84 5 nh Berlin Alexanderplatz Landsberger Allee 26-32 | 10243 Berlin Hotelrestaurant +49 30 422 613 0 | www.nh-hotels.com 6 Ristorante da Vinci Petersburger Straße 24 | 10243 Berlin +49 30 420 256-900 | 50 Getting Around in Berlin Berlin has a fantastic public transport system, including an efficient U-Bahn and S-Bahn system and a dense Bus network. Fares are low if you buy a day ticket or – even better – a Berlin Welcome Card. Best tip: Pre-order a Berlin WelcomeCard and pick it up on arrival. http://www.berlin.de/international/berlin_az/public_transport/welcomecard-engl/index.en.php The Welcome Card comes in eight versions: (Zones AB is sufficient to get around in Berlin, but if you want to visit Potsdam, you need ABC) 1. Berlin (fare zones Berlin AB) Valid for one person 48 hours - € 16,90 72 hours - € 22,90 5 days - € 29,90 2. Berlin and Potsdam (fare zones Berlin ABC) Valid for one adult and max. three children up to 14 years old (children under 6 travel free) 48 hours - € 18,90 72 hours - € 24,90 5 days - € 34,90 3. Berlin WelcomeCard Museumsinsel (Museum Island) incl. free admission to the Museums of the Museum Island on three consecutive days (excl. special exhibitions) 72 hours (fare zones Berlin AB*) - € 34,00 72 hours (fare zones Berlin ABC**) - € 36,00 51 While you are here: 10 things to do in Berlin 1. Political Interest Well, EPSA is a political science association and you learn much about politics if you look at the buildings governments like to build for themselves. However, the dome of the Reichstag is open to the public if you preregister. Like many other famous buildings, the Brandenburg Gate is smaller than you might think. These buildings neighbor each other. The Kanzleramt is not open to the public, but you can walk around the building to find out whether you like the architecture. Probably not. detainment and transit camp called 'Special Camp No. 3'. After the camp was closed in October 1946, the cellar was converted into an underground cell section that served as the main Soviet Secret Police prison in Germany and was used for detention and interrogation. In 1951 the East German Ministry of State Security (MfS) took over the prison, added a new prison building and, until 1989, used the site as its main remand centre. Thousands of political prisoners passed through this jail, including nearly all the prominent figures opposing the GDR regime. If you take a tour, your guide is most likely a former inmate. Note that you have to pre-register. http://en.stiftung-hsh.de/anmeldung.php Gedenkstätte Berlin-Hohenschönhausen Genslerstraße 66 13055 Berlin 1.1. Reichstag The Reichstag dome is the large glass dome at the very top of the building. The dome has a 360-degree view of the surrounding Berlin cityscape. The main hall of the parliament below can also be seen from the cupola, and natural light from above radiates down to the parliament floor. A large sun shield tracks the movement of the sun electronically and blocks direct sunlight which would not only cause large solar gain, but bedazzle those below. Construction work was finished in 1999 and the seat of parliament was transferred to the Bundestag in April of that year. The dome is no longer open to anyone without prior registration. https://visite.bundestag.de/BAPWeb/pages/createBooking Request.jsf?lang=en http://www.bundestag.de/htdocs_e/index.html 1.5. Deutsches Historisches Museum In this exhibit more than 8,000 historical objects testify to political events and struggles as well as to social, economic and intellectual developments. Spread across two floors of the former Prussian armory building, with illustrative multi-media stations and special pedagogical opportunities, it presents an enthralling and intellectually enriching tour of the vicissitudes of German history in its greater European context from the beginning of our common era into the present that the visitor can customize according to their personal interest. Zeughaus und Ausstellungshalle Unter den Linden 2, 10117 Berlin http://www.dhm.de/ENGLISH/ 1.2. Brandenburg Gate The Brandenburger Tor is a monumental gate built in the 18th century as a symbol of peace. During the Cold War, when the gate was located right near the border between East and West Berlin, it became a symbol of a divided city. Since the fall of the Berlin Wall, the Brandenburger Gate has become the symbol of a reunified Berlin. The desolate area that Pariser Platz was during the cold war, is now completely redeveloped and has regained much of its 19th century grandeur. http://www.stadtentwicklung.berlin.de/denkmal/denkmal e_in_berlin/en/unter_den_linden/brandenburger_tor.sht ml 1.6. Jüdisches Museum The Jewish Museum Berlin opened in September 2001. Two years earlier, the empty new building by architect Daniel Libeskind was an unexpected visitor attraction. In this section, we present the building complex in image and text: The Old Building – the baroque Collegienhaus, the postmodern Libeskind Building and the new Glass Courtyard erected in 2007. The circumstances of the museum’s foundation, the collections it is based on, and the people who have directed its development can be found here as well as personalities of public life who are dedicated to intercultural understanding and have been honored with the Jewish Museum’s Prize for Understanding and Tolerance. http://www.jmberlin.de/main/EN/homepage-EN.php Jüdisches Museum Berlin Lindenstraße 9-14, 10969 Berlin 1.3. Regierungsviertel A guided tour through the government district http://www.berlin-tour-and-guide.com/walking-toursberlin/government-district-reichstag.htm 1.4. Hohenschoenhausen Prison It would be hard to find another site in Germany so intricately linked with the 44-year history of political persecution in the Soviet Occupation Zone and the German Democratic Republic (GDR) as the BerlinHohenschönhausen Memorial. In June 1945, the Soviet Secret Police took over a former canteen block and food store in the north-east of Berlin and turned it into a 1.7. DDR Museum The DDR Museum is the only museum which concentrates on everyday life in the GDR. We don't only show the crimes of the State Security or the border defences at the 52 Berlin Wall but we display the life of the people in the dictatorship: Maybe you know the spreewald pickles, nudism beaches and the Trabi - the rest of the life in this socialist state is unfamiliar to most of the people in the world. Karl-Liebknecht-Str. 1 3.1. The Altes Museum (Old Museum) completed on the orders of Karl Friedrich Schinkel in 1830. 3.2. The Neues Museum (New Museum) finished in 1859 according to plans by Friedrich August Stüler, a student of Schinkel. Destroyed in World War II, it was rebuilt under the direction of David Chipperfield for the Egyptian Museum of Berlin and re-opened in 2009. 3.3. The Alte Nationalgalerie (Old National Gallery) completed in 1876, also according to designs by Friedrich August Stüler, to host a collection of 19th century art donated by banker Joachim H. W. Wagener 3.4. The Bode Museum on the island's northern tip, opened in 1904 and then called Kaiser-Friedrich-Museum. It exhibits the sculpture collections and late Antique and Byzantine art. 3.5. The Pergamon Museum, the final museum of the complex, constructed in 1930. It contains multiple reconstructed immense and historically significant buildings such as the Pergamon Altar and the Ishtar Gate of Babylon. In 1999, the museum complex was added to the UNESCO list of World Heritage Sites. Distance from hotels: walking: 20 minutes 1.8. Stasimuseum We almost managed to have a reception there. But then it would not happen. German bureaucracy! You can sit at Erich Mielke’s desk and perhaps walk in his steps. Ruschestraße 103, Haus 1 http://www.stasimuseum.de/en/enbesuch.htm However, the true Berlin “number one” is our number 2 2. Berlin Junk Food 2.1. Currywurst is the idiosyncratic combination of pork sausage, cut into slices, smothered with a mixture of ketchup and curry powder and then served with a bread roll or fries. Konnopke’s Imbiss on Schönhauser Allee has been serving Currywurst since 1930. Konnopke’s: Prenzlauer Berg, Schönhauser Allee 44 B 4. Water 4.1. Berlin Lakes, Rivers, and Canals Berlin has more bridges than Venice. 2.2. Döner Kebab is one of Germany's most popular fast food dishes. Annual sales in Germany amount to 2.5 billion euros. Veal and chicken are widely used instead of lamb, particularly by vendors with large ethnic German customer bases, for whom lamb is traditionally less preferred. Typically, along with the meat, a salad consisting of chopped lettuce, cabbage, onions, cucumber, and tomatoes is offered, as well as a choice of sauces—hot sauce (scharfe Soße), herb sauce (Kräutersoße), garlic sauce (Knoblauchsoße), or yogurt (Joghurtsoße). The filling is served in thick flatbread (Fladenbrot) that is usually toasted or warmed. There is no shortage of great Döner places in Berlin. Make sure you buy one in Kreuzberg around the Heinrichplatz – there are roughly 4 million Turks in Germany, with perhaps 300.000 in Kreuzberg and neighboring Neukoelln. Didim Grill or a Hasir are places to look for. 4.2. Badeschiff The Badeschiff (bathing ship) is part art project, part swimming pool, part discotheque. Originally conceived by local artist Susanne Lorenz and made out of an old river cargo container, the Badeschiff floats atop Berlin’s longneglected and unswimmable River Spree. In the summer, the pool is completely uncovered, creating a mini-oasis of clean, cool water that puts swimmers almost eye-level with the Spree. DJs spin tunes as people frequent the open-air bar and hang out on the wooden boardwalks. Non-Germans be warned: German sauna culture demands full nudity and the staff are strict about it. “Past the gritty, industrial sprawl of a decommissioned bus depot lies a scene straight out of Ibiza: tight bods bronzing in the sand, hipsters carousing at the bar and hotties cooling off in the blue water of … wait a minute. No, it's not the Mediterranean but a former river barge turned swimming pool anchored in the Spree River. After sundown, the Badeschiff morphs into an alfresco night club, and in winter they add a couple of saunas and cover everything with an eerily glowing, futuristic membrane.” Guardian, London Eichenstrasse 4 12435 Berlin Public transport: 3. Museumsinsel Museum Island (German: Museumsinsel) is the name of the northern half of an island in the Spree river in the central Mitte district of Berlin, Germany, the site of the old city of Cölln. It is so called for the complex of five internationally significant museums, all part of the Berlin State Museums that occupy the island's northern part: 53 U-Bahn Schlesisches Tor Website: www.arena-berlin.de Distance from venue: walking: 30 minutes 5. Kneipen und Bars 4.3. Aquarium The primeval forest under glass Even after ninety years the most significant show aquarium in Germany is still a Mecca of biodiversity and history for aquarium and terrarium fans. Extent Since it opened its doors for the very first time the three storeys of Zoo-Aquarium have been presenting a section through the classes of fish, lower animals, reptiles, amphibians, and articulates around its heart, the Crocodile Hall, at that time the world’s first walk-in animal enclosure for visitors. Number of animals and species With the largest number of species of its kind this building provides terrariums and aquariums for over 9,000 animals of almost 800 species. http://www.aquarium-berlin.de/aquarium.html?L=1 Budapester Straße 32, 10787 Berlin 5.1. Friedrichshain Alongside the neighboring districts of Mitte, Prenzlauer Berg, and Kreuzberg, Friedrichshain is now considered one of Berlin's most fashionable areas, and is home to numerous design and media companies including MTV Central Europe. It is known for its many bars, clubs, pubs, and cafes, concentrated in the vicinity of Simon-DachStraße and Boxhagener Platz. There were numerous squats in Friedrichshain, particularly in Rigaer Straße. In contrast to the more gentrified and expensive districts of Prenzlauer Berg and Mitte, Friedrichshain has a slightly run-down atmosphere, and its lower rents following German reunification attracted students and artists. Nowadays numerous restoration works are under way and Friedrichshain is developing at a fast pace becoming more and more gentrified itself. 5.2. Prenzlauer Berg Countless pubs, restaurants, cafés, galleries and little shops create a day and nightlife atmosphere unrivalled in the rest of Berlin. Along with Schöneberg and Mitte, Prenzlauer Berg is a focal point of the Berlin art scene. Along with Friedrichshain and Kreuzberg it is also a popular neighbourhood with the student population. Prenzlauer Berg is one of the most popular districts in Berlin, is one of Berlin's prettiest neighbourhoods, still central, yet quieter than Berlin Mitte. Much of Prenzlauer Berg escaped damage in the second world war and post war redevelopment. Nowadays Prenzlauer Berg offers trendy shopping with many streetstyle fashion designers selling their wares in trendy boutiques. Prenzlauer Berg has become famous for being one of the few places in Germany where there has actually been a baby boom in recent years. There is an abundance of playgrounds Helmholtzplatz, Kollwitzplatz, kitas (child daycare centers) and shops selling toys and second hand children's clothing. However, the birthrate is not higher than elsewhere in Germany. Instead, the impression of a high number of children is based on the large percentage of people between 20 and 40 years who are potential parents of young children. Prenzlauer Berg has recently become a popular area for the current wave of American and European immigrants into Berlin, many of whom are artists who have moved to Berlin in search of the cheap downtown apartments and studio space which are very hard to find in other capital cities and 'centres for the arts' like New York, London and Paris but which are abundant in Berlin. Conversations in English can often be heard in the street cafes along the Kastanienallee. 4. The Wall It used to be everywhere. And now it isn’t. 4.1. Checkpoint Charlie Checkpoint Charlie (or "Checkpoint C") was the name given by the Western Allies to the best-known Berlin Wall crossing point between East Berlin and West Berlin during the Cold War. The Soviet Union prompted the construction of the Berlin Wall in 1961 to stop Eastern Bloc emigration westward through the Soviet border system, preventing escape across the city sector border from East Berlin to West Berlin. Checkpoint Charlie became a symbol of the Cold War, representing the separation of east and west. Soviet and American tanks briefly faced each other at the location during the Berlin Crisis of 1961. After the dissolution of the Eastern Bloc and the reunification of Germany, the building at Checkpoint Charlie became a tourist attraction. 4.2 East Side Gallery The East Side Gallery is an international memorial for freedom. It is a 1.3 km long section of the Berlin Wall located near the centre of Berlin on Mühlenstraße in Friedrichshain-Kreuzberg. The Gallery consists of 105 paintings by artists from all over the world, painted in 1990 on the east side of the Berlin Wall. It is possibly the largest and longest-lasting open air gallery in the world. http://www.die-berlinermauer.de/index.php?option=com_wrapper&view=wrappe r&Itemid=120&lang=en Distance from venue/hotel: 20 minutes 5.3. Kreuzberg Kreuzberg has historically been home to the Berlin's punk rock movement as well as other alternative subcultures in Germany. The SO36 club remains a fixture on the Berlin 54 music scene. It was originally focused on punk music and in the 1970s was often frequented by Iggy Pop and David Bowie. In those days the club rivalled New York's CBGB as one of the finest new-wave venues in the world. There has also been a significant influence stemming from AfricanAmerican and hip hop culture on Kreuzberg's youth and the area has become a centre for rap and breakdance within Berlin. Though the majority of Kreuzberg's residents are of German or Turkish descent, some identify more with American or African-American culture. 7. Berlin (Flea) Markets 5.4. Hacke’sche Hoefe Berlin’s Hackesche Höfe (Hof means courtyard) – just off SBahn Station Hackescher Markt, is a heritage site consisting of eight communicating, restored rear courtyards accessible through Rosenthalerstrasse 40’s main arched entrance. The area, also known as the Scheunenviertel is one of Berlin’s top entertainment hubs, popular with Berliners and visitors alike and a magnet for club-goers since the 1990’s. Bustling with restaurants, boutiques, galleries, cinemas and the Chamäleon Varieté, the Hackesche Höfe are once again a major attraction in the popular district of Berlin-Mitte. This eight courtyard complex is a prime example of the successful synthesis of residential, commercial and cultural spaces in old Berlin. The Höfe were built in 1906/7 on 10,000 square meters according to plans by Kurt Berndt and August Endell, and together they made up Europe’s largest courtyard complex. Distance from hotel: 5 minutes 7.3. Flohmarkt am Mauerpark: This is one of the biggest and busiest flea markets in Berlin, retailing everything from cheap Third World fashion to cardboard boxes of black market CDs.... Bernauer Strasse 63-64 7.1. Flohmarket am Arkonaplatz has a broad array of retro gear ranging from records to clothing, books to trinkets, bikes to coffee tables - all at moderate... 7.2. Flohmarkt am Boxhagener Platz: Many local young artists and T-shirt designers set up stalls at this overflowing market, while punky types and bohemian mothers shop for vintage sunglasses... 7.4. Market at Kollwitzplatz: Small, open-air market. Steaming punch and wholegrain cinnamon waffles make it gemütlich in winter, but it's more lively in summer. An exclusively organic market for a gentrified area. Distance from hotel/venue: 30 minutes 8. Berlin Club Scene There are more clubs in Berlin than we can recommend here. Some of the Berlin clubs are tough in various respects, you may want to find out yourself, or you don’t. Here is a diverse sample, all within easy reach from venue/hotels. 5.5. Oranienburger Strasse Oranienburger Straße is a street in central Berlin, the capital of Germany. It is located in the borough of Mitte, north of the River Spree, and runs south-east from Friedrichstraße to Hackescher Markt. The street is popular with tourists and Berliners for its nightlife with numerous restaurants and bars. Formerly a centre of Jewish life in Berlin, the street contains the restored New Synagogue. Another tourist landmark is the Kunsthaus Tacheles, an alternative art center and night club. Locals tend to congregate in Monbijou Park or other areas of the city. Oranienburger Straße is also known for relatively prominent street prostitution, which is legal in Germany. 8.1 Clärchen's Ballhaus This old-school dancehall has been frequented by nimble-footed Berliners since it opened in 1913, and under new management is now more popular than ever. There are two ballrooms - the upstairs Mirror salon is the grander, but both still sport vintage details and a programme of tango, swing or salsa. You can also just stop by for a pizza. Address: Auguststrasse 24, Transport S1, S2 Oranienburger Strasse 8.2. Kaffee Burger Best known as home of the popular twice-monthly Russendisko, Kaffee Burger's programme runs the cultural gamut. Early evenings may see readings, film screenings or live music. Later on, DJs play anything from old-school country to Balkan beats or Britpop. The club's decor has been left intact from GDR days, and relatively bright lighting facilitates interaction with strangers... as do the cheap drinks. Torstrasse 60 Transport U2 Rosa-Luxemburg-Platz 6. Cabaret 6.1. Bar jeder Vernuft http://www.bar-jeder-vernunft.de/en/home/ 8.3. Kim perfectly captures that unfinished look with which Berlin's fashionable set is so enamoured. Kim has been a favourite since it opened in 2007. The door is unmarked; just look for an all-glass façade and crowds sporting New Romantic haircuts and skinny jeans. The dimly lit, white- 55 walled space is DIY: under a geometric dropped ceiling are stackable chairs and tables that guests can arrange as they like. Cheap drinks and a rotating roster of neighbourhood DJs add to a don't-give-a-damn aesthetic. Address: Brunnenstrasse 10 Transport U8 Rosenthaler Platz 8.6. Tresor Housed in what was formerly the main centralheating power station for East Berlin, the colossal location is breathtaking, and since only a tiny portion of its 28,000sq m (300,000sq ft) is in use, there's plenty of room for future development in what is intended to be not just a club, but a huge centre of alternative art and culture. The basement floor is an experience you'll not forget; a black hole occasionally punctuated by flashing strobes with some of the loudest, hardest techno you are likely to hear. Adress: Köpenicker Strasse 70 Transport U8 Heinrich-Heine-Strasse or S5, S9, S7, S75 Jannowitzbrücke 8.4. Watergate This two-floor riverside club has a slick feel, a great view of the Spree and a better-than-average sound system. The two best features here are the panorama windows above the river and the flash, ceilingmounted lighting display. Both floors are open on weekends and usually host two different sets of acts. Music policy is in the electro, house and minimal techno area - Ricardo Villalobos and Richie Hawtin often play although artists such as Booka Shade and Digitalism occasionally appear. Falckensteinstrasse 49 Transport U1 Schlesisches Tor 9. Berlin’s Michelin Star Restaurants (a selection of those within easy reach from Berlin-Mitte) You can also go to Friedrichshain or Kreuzberg to eat reasonably priced. Expect the following restaurants to be in the 50-100 Euro area, per person that is. 9.1. Fischers Fritz, Charlottenstr. 49 D - 10117 Berlin 9.2. reinstoff, Schlegelstr. 26c D - 10115 Berlin 9.3. Lorenz Adlon, Unter den Linden 77 D - 10117 Berlin 9.4. VAU, Jägerstr. 54 D - 10117 Berlin 9.5. Rutz, Chausseestr. 8 D - 10115 Berlin 9.6. Tim Raue, Rudi-Dutschke-Str. 26 D - 10969 Kreuzberg 9.7. Margaux, Unter den Linden 78 D - 10117 Berlin 9.8. Horváth, Paul-Lincke-Ufer 44a D - 10999 Kreuzberg 8.5. Berghain/Panorama Bar A strong contender for best club in the city, if not Europe. In basic terms, it's a techno club in a former power station, but it has to be experienced to be fully understood. Even non-fans of the genre fall head over heels in love with the relaxed atmosphere, interesting mix of eccentrics, well-thoughtout design details, fantastic sound system and sexually liberal attitude. Adress: Wriezener Karree Transport S3, S5, S7, S75, S9 Ostbahnhof 10. Classical Music in Berlin http://www.berliner-philharmoniker.de/en/ http://www.deutscheoperberlin.de/?page=intro&languag e=en_EN http://www.staatsoper-berlin.de/en_EN/index http://akanthus.de/a_ver/findex.htm (page in German) 56 Author Index Aardal, Bernt, Fri 8.30 Ade, Florian, Sat 17.00 Aguiar-Conraria, Luís, Thu 12.30 Aichholzer, Julian, Sat 8.30 Alarcón-González, Javier, Fri 17.00 Alexiadou, Despina, Thu 14.45, Fri 12.30, Fri 14.45 Allik, Mirjam, Sat 17.00 Alonso, Sonia, Sat 12.30 Alt, James, Fri 17.00, Fri 12.30 Annesley, Claire, Sat 12.30 Appleton, Andrew, Thu 10.30 Aragones, Enriqueta, Thu 14.45, Sat 12.30 Arias, Luz Marina, Thu 10.30, Fri 12.30 Arnold, Christian, Thu 12.30, Fri 14.45 Asquer, Raffaele, Thu 17.00 Atikcan, Ece, Fri 10.30 Bevan, Shaun, Fri 17.00 Bhavnani, Ravi, Sat 14.45 Bicquelet, Aude, Thu 14.45 Biesenbender, Jan, Fri 14.45 Birney, Mayling, Sat 14.45 Bischoff, Carina, Sat 12.30 Biziouras, Nikolaos, Sat 17.00 Blendin, Hanja, Sat 12.30 Blome, Agnes, Sat 14.45 Blumenau, Jack, Thu 10.30 Boda, Zsolt, Thu 10.30 Bodea, Cristina, Thu 12.30, Fri 10.30, Fri 17.00 Boehmke, Frederick, Thu 12.30 Böhm, Katharina, Thu 12.30 Böhmelt, Tobias, Thu 17.00 Bohnet, Heidrun, Sat 12.30 Bol, Damien, Thu 14.45, Fri 14.45 Bølstad, Jørgen, Fri 12.30, Sat 17.00 Boranbay, Serra, Thu 12.30 Bowler, Shaun, Thu 12.30 Boylan, Christopher, Thu 17.00 Brams, Steven, Thu 10.30 Brandenburg, Jens, Fri 8.30 Bräuninger, Thomas, Thu 14.45, Fri 17.00 Brigden, Noelle, Thu 12.30, Fri 12.30 Broesamle, Klaus, Sat 14.45 Browne, Julie, Thu 17.00 Brunner, Martin, Thu 14.45 Buckley, Noah, Sat 12.30 Buisseret, Peter, Fri 8.30 Bunea, Adriana, Sat 14.45 Bunte, Jonas, Sat 10.30 Burlacu, Diana, Sat 8.30 Bussmann, Margit, Fri 8.30 Baccini, Leonardo, Thu 12.30, Fri 14.45 Bagno-Moldavsky, Olena, Thu 12.30, Fri 12.30, Sat 10.30 Bagozzi, Benjamin, Thu 14.45 Bailer, Stefanie, Sat 14.45 Bakke, Kristin, Sat 12.30 Balasubramanyan, Ramnath, Sat 8.30 Balcells, Laia, Thu 17.00 Bang, Karoline, Fri 8.30 Barber, Benjamin, Fri 17.00 Barbera-Aranguena, Pablo, Thu 14.45, Sat 8.30, Sat 12.30 Barisione, Mauro, Fri 12.30 Bartkowska, Monika, Fri 10.30 Bastos, Aurelio, Thu 12.30 Baturo, Alexander, Fri 10.30, Fri 17.00 Bauer, Michael, Fri 14.45 Bauer, Paul, Thu 14.45 Bayer, Resat, Fri 12.30 Beber, Bernd, Thu 10.30, Sat 8.30 Becher, Michael, Fri 8.30 Bechtel, Michael, Fri 17.00, Fri 12.30 Behnke, Joachim, Fri 14.45, Thu 12.30 Benoit, Kenneth, Thu 14.45, Sat 14.45 Beramendi, Pablo, Fri 8.30, Fri 12.30 Berger, Daniel, Fri 14.45, Thu 10.45 Berlinski, Samuel, Fri 17.00 Bernauer, Thomas, Sat 10.30 Bernhagen, Patrick, Fri 10.30, Fri 17.00, Sat 8.30 Bernhard, William, Sat 17.00 Cabeza, Laura, Sat 12.30 Camisão, Isabel, Thu 10.30 Carey, Sean, Fri 14.45 Carrión, Marina, Fri 14.45 Carter, David, Thu 12.30 Casas, Agustin, Thu 10.30 Castanheira, Micael, Sat 12.30 Castro, Graziella, Fri 8.30 Castro-Conde, Cristina, Fri 14.45 Cederman, Lars-Erik, Thu 12.30 Ceron, Andrea, Fri 17.00 Chyzh, Olga, Thu 12.30 Cioroianu, Iulia, Fri 10.30 Cirone, Alexandra, Fri 17.00 Clark, Tom, Thu 17.00 Bertelli, Anthony, Fri 17.00, Sat 10.30, Sat 8.30 57 Cohen, William, Sat 8.30 Colaresi, Michael, Sat 10.30, Fri 8.30 Colgan, Jeff, Thu 12.30, Fri 14.45, Thu 14.45 Cook, Scott, Sat 14.45 Cordes, Till, Sat 10.30 Costalli, Stefano, Fri 12.30, Sat 16.45 Coughlan, Ed, Fri 12.30 Courtney, Michael, Thu 10.30, Fri 17.00 Crombez, Christophe, Thu 12.30, Thu 14.45, Fri 10.30, Thu 12.30 Cross, James, Sat 8.30 Cruz, Cesi, Sat 8.30 Cunningham, Kathleen, Sat 12.30 Curini, Luigi, Fri 14.45, Sat 12.30 Curto-Grau, Marta, Fri 14.45 Elgie, Robert, Fri 12.30 Elkink, Johan, Fri 10.30, Fri 17.00 Elsayed, Shimaa, Thu 14.45 Elsig, Manfred, Thu 12.30 Engeli, Isabelle, Thu 10.30, Sat 12.30 Engst, Benjamin, Sat 10.30, Thu 10.45 Epifanio, Mariaelisa, Thu 14.45, Thu 17.00 Erikson, Robert, Fri 8.30, Thu 17.00 Escribà-Folch, Abel, Thu 14.45 Exadaktylos, Theofanis, Thu 10.30 Eznack, Lucile, Fri 17.00 Ezrow, Lawrence, Sat 14.45, Fri 10.30 Dannwolf, Tanja, Sat 12.30, Sat 14.45 Darcillon, Thibault, Thu 10.30 Däubler, Thomas, Thu 14.45, Sat 12.30 Davis, Christina, Thu 12.30 Daxecker, Ursula, Fri 12.30, Sat 16.45 De Ferrari, Ignazio, Sat 8.30 de la Calle, Luis, Thu 10.30, Sat 14.45 De Vries, Catherine, Sat 8.30, Sat 14.45, Thu 17.00 Debus, Marc, Sat 12.30 Dewan, Torun, Fri 17.00, Sat 10.30, Sat 12.30, Sat 12.30 Di Virgilio, Aldo, Fri 14.45 Dickson, Eric, Fri 8.30, Sat 10.30, Sat 14.45 Dietrich, Simone, Fri 14.45 Dinas, Elias, Thu 14.45, Fri 10.30, Fri 12.30, Thu 12.30 Dlabac, Oliver, Thu 10.30, Fri 14.45 Dluhosch, Barbara, Fri 14.45 do Vale, Helder, Thu 10.30, Fri 8.30 Doherty, David, Sat 10.30 Donnay, Karsten, Sat 14.45 Döring, Holger, Sat 12.30, Sat 14.45, Fri 8.30 Dorussen, Han, Sat 10.30 Dowling, Conor, Sat 10.30 Doyle, David, Thu 12.30 Drepper, Bettina, Fri 14.45 Duch, Ray, Thu 12.30, Fri 17.00, Sat 17.00, Fri 17.00 Duell, Dominik, Fri 8.30, Sat 12.30 Dunleavy, Christopher, Thu 12.30 Dunleavy, Patrick, Sat 12.30 Dür, Andreas, Thu 12.30, Fri 14.45, Fri 12.30 Duttle, Thomas, Fri 14.45 Faas, Thorsten, Thu 17.00 Facchine, François, Sat 14.45 Falcó-Gimeno, Albert, Fri 14.45 Farrell, David, Thu 12.30 Fauvelle-Aymar, Christine, Fri 12.30, Fri 14.45 Fazekas, Zoltán, Thu 14.45, Sat 12.30, Thu 12.30 Fernandez-Albertos, Jose, Thu 17.00, Fri 10.30, Thu 14.45 Fernández-i-Marín, Xavier, Thu 14.45 Fernandez-Vazquez, Pablo, Fri 10.30, Sat 12.30 Fieldhouse, Ed, Fri 10.30 Finke, Daniel, Fri 14.45, Sat 8.30, Sat 14.45 Fiva, Jon, Thu 17.00, Sat 8.30 Fjelde, Hanne, Thu 12.30 Fleig, Andreas, Sat 8.30 Flores, Thomas, Fri 12.30 Folch, Abel, Fri 10.30 Folke, Olle, Thu 17.00 Foos, Florian, Thu 14.45, Sat 14.45 Fortin, Jessica, Sat 12.30 Fortunato, David, Thu 17.00, Fri 10.30, Thu 17.00 Foucault, Martial, Fri 17.00 Fox, Sean, Thu 10.30, Fri 8.30, Sat 12.30 Franchino, Fabio, Thu 14.45, Sat 12.30, Fri 14.45 Françon, Baptiste, Thu 17.00 Franke, Michael, Sat 17.00 Franzese, Robert, Thu 12.30, Thu 12.30, Fri 10.30 Freier, Ronny, Sat 17.00, Thu 17.00 Freudenreich, Johannes, Thu 14.45, 2301 Freyburg, Tina, Thu 14.45, Fri 14.45, Fri 8.30 Frishman, Olga, Sat 12.30 Frye, Timothy, Sat 12.30 Fuchs, Susan, Fri 17.00 Fürstenberg, Michael, Fri 8.30 Ecker-Ehrhardt, Matthias, Fri 12.30, Fri 12.30 Eckhardt, Jappe, Thu 12.30 Edmonds, Bruce, Fri 10.30 Efrat, Asif, Fri 12.30, Sat 8.30 Eggers, Andrew, Thu 17.00, Fri 17.00, Sat 12.30 Gains, Francesca, Sat 12.30 Galleguillos, Elizabeth, Thu 12.30 Garifullina, Guzel, Sat 12.30 Gartzke, Erik, Fri 8.30, Fri 12.30, Fri 14.45, Sat 14.45 Gaskins, Ben, Thu 17.00 58 Gates, Scott, Thu 14.45 Gattermann, Katjana, Fri 10.30, Fri 17.00, Sat 10.30 Genovese, Federica, Thu 14.45, Sat 8.30 Gerber, Alan, Sat 10.30 Geys, Benny, Fri 17.00, Sat 12.30 Ghitza, Yair, Fri 8.30 Giani, Marco, Sat 12.30 Giannetti, Daniela, Fri 14.45 Giebler, Heiko, Thu 10.30, Sat 10.30 Giger, Nathalie, Fri 17.00, Sat 8.30 Gilardi, Fabrizio, Thu 10.30, Fri 17.00, Sat 12.30, Thu 14.45 Gizelis, Ismene, Sat 10.30 Glasgow, Garrett, Sat 12.30 Glatzer, Miguel, Fri 17.00, Sat 17.00 Goerres, Achim, Thu 10.30, Fri. 17.00 Gohdes, Anita, Fri 8.30, Thu 10.45 Golder, Matt, Thu 17.00, Sat 14.45 Golder, Sona, Sat 12.30, Thu 14.45 Goldsmith, Benjamin, Fri 10.30, Sat 14.45, Fri 8.30 Gomez, Raul, Fri 12.30 Gómez, Braulio, Sat 12.30 Goodfellow, Tom, Thu 10.30 Goodhart, Lucy, Fri 12.30, Sat 10.30 Gordon, Sanford, Sat 10.30, Sat 14.45, Thu 10.45 Gorecki, Maciej, Sat 17.00 Goyer, Michel, Sat 12.30, Thu 12.30 Grafström, Cassandra, Fri 8.30 Grand, Peter, Fri 12.30 Gray, Julia, Thu 12.30 Green-Pedersen, Christoffer, Fri 17.00 Greszki, Robert, Sat 8.30, Sat 10.30 Grimm, Sonja, Fri 14.45 Gschwend, Thomas, Fri 17.00 Günther, Simone, Thu 12.30, Fri 12.30 Gutekunst, Christine, Sat 14.45 Hegre, Håvard, Fri 14.45, Sat 14.45 Heinrich, Tobias, Fri 10.30, Sat 8.30 Helbing, Dirk, Sat 14.45 Helbling, Marc, Fri 12.30, Sat 10.30, Fri 12.30 Heller, William, Sat 17.00 Hellwig, Tim, Sat 14.45 Hering, Dorte, Thu 12.30 Hermansson, Henrik, Sat 12.30 Herzog, Alexander, Sat 14.45 Higashijima, Masaaki, Fri 10.30 Hinnerich, Björn, Sat 14.45 Hirsch, Alexander, Thu 14.45 Hix, Simon, Thu 14.45, Fri 17.00 Hobolt, Sara, Fri 10.30, Fri 17.00, Sat 8.30, Sat 14.45 Hobolth, Mogens, Fri 12.30 Hoelscher, Kristian, Fri 8.30 Hoffmann, Bert, Thu 14.45, Sat 14.45 Hollyer, James, Fri 10.30, Fri 8.30 Holzinger, Katharina, Fri 10.30, Sat 12.30 Hönnige, Christoph, Sat 10.30 Horgos, Daniel, Fri 14.45 Horiuchi, Yusaku, Fri 10.30 Horn, Alexander, Sat 12.30 Hortala-Vallve, Rafael, Thu 14.45, Fri 17.00, Sat 10.30, Fri 8.30 Houle, Christian, Sat 14.45 Høyland, Bjørn, Thu 14.45, Fri 17.00, Sat 12.30, Fri 17.00 Huber, Greg, Sat 10.30 Huber, Gregory, Sat 10.30 Huber, Sascha, Thu 17.00, Fri 14.45 Hug, Simon, Thu 14.45, Thu 17.00, Fri 10.30 Hughes, Niall, Thu 14.45, Fri 17.00 Hugh-Jones, David, Thu 10.30, Sat 17.00 Hultman, Lisa, Fri 8.30, Fri 14.45 Hunziker, Philipp, Thu 12.30 Hurka, Steffen, Thu 10.30 Hurrelmann, Achim, Fri 10.30 Häge, Frank, Sat 8.30 Hainmueller, Jens, Fri 17.00, Sat 10.30, Sat 14.45, Sat 10.30 Hakhverdian, Armèn, Thu 17.00 Hallerberg, Mark, Fri 10.30, Fri 12.30, Thu 17.00 Hancke, Bob, Fri 12.30, Sat 17.00 Hangartner, Dominik, Sat 14.45, Fri 14.45 Hansen, Martin, Thu 14.45, Fri 8.30, Sat 14.45 Hansen, Vibeke, Thu 14.45 Harder, Niklas, Thu 12.30 Harfst, Philipp, Fri 14.45, Sat 12.30 Hartlapp, Miriam, Sat 12.30 Hashimoto, Barry, Thu 10.30, Thu 14.45, Fri 8.30 Hatab, Ibrahim, Thu 14.45 Hays, Jude, Thu 12.30, Sat 10.30 Hazlett, Chad, Sat 10.30 Ibenskas, Raimondas, Thu 14.45, Fri 17.00 Ichpekova, Diana, Thu 17.00 Iida, Takeshi, Fri 8.30 Indridason, Indridi, Thu 12.30, Sat 12.30 Ionita, Irina, Fri 12.30, Fri 14.45 Jäckle, Sebastian, Sat 14.45 Jacquier, Kristel, Sat 10.30 Jensen, Mads, Sat 14.45 Jensen, Nathan, Thu 17.00 Jensen, Peter, Thu 10.30 Jensen, Thomas, Thu 17.00 Johann, David, Fri 17.00 John, Peter, Fri 17.00 59 Johnston, Richard, Fri 12.30 Jones, Richard, Thu 12.30 Juhász, Zoltán, Sat 10.30 Justesen, Mogens, Thu 10.30, Fri 8.30 Kugler, Tadeusz, Thu 17.00 Kuhn, Patrick, Fri 12.30, Sat 14.45 Kuhn, Theresa, Thu 17.00, Sat 17.00 Kukolowicz, Paula, Sat 17.00 Kuo, Alexander, Thu 17.00 Kus, Basak, Fri 12.30 Kadera, Kelly, Fri 8.30, Thu 17.00 Kaeding, Michael, Fri 17.00 Kagotani, Koji, Fri 8.30, Thu 17.00 Kam, Christopher, Fri 8.30 Kappe, Roland, Fri 8.30, Sat 8.30 Karlsen, Rune, Fri 8.30 Karol, David, Sat 14.45, Fri 10.30 Karp, Jeffrey, Thu 12.30 Kato, Junko, Fri 8.30 Katsaitis, Alexander, Fri 17.00 Kavakli, Kerim, Thu 17.00 Kayser, Mark, Sat 14.45, Thu 17.00 Kellstedt, Paul, Sat 17.00, Fri 10.30 Kemahlioglu, Ozge, Sat 8.30 Kemmerling, Achim, Sat 10.30 Kenkel, Brenton, Fri 10.30 Kerckhoven, Sven, Thu 12.30 Kern, Florian, Thu 14.45 Kerner, Andrew, Fri 14.45 Kiel, Marcel, Fri 17.00 Kilgour, Marc, Thu 10.30 Kim, Soo, Thu 12.30, Fri 14.45, Sat 12.30 Kiss, Zsolt, Fri 10.30 Kleibl, Johannes, Thu 10.30 Kleine, Mareike, Sat 14.45 Klemmensen, Robert, Thu 14.45, Fri 17.00 Klima, Andre, Fri 8.30 Kluever, Heike, Thu 10.30, Fri 17.00, Sat 12.30 Knutsen, Carl, Fri 10.30, Thu 14.45 Koch, Michael, Fri 12.30 Köker, Philipp, Fri 17.00 König, Thomas, Thu 12.30, Fri 14.45, Sat 10.30, Thu 14.45 Konstantinidis, Nikitas, Thu 10.30, Thu 12.30, Fri 14.45 Kosmidis, Spyros, Fri 14.45, Sat 12.30 Koubi, Vally, Thu 17.00, Sat 10.30 Kourtelis, Christos, Sat 8.30 Kraft, Patrick, Fri 12.30 Kreituse, Ilga, Fri 12.30 Kreppel, Amie, Fri 12.30, Sat 14.45 Kroh, Martin, Thu 12.30 Kroth, Verena, Fri 12.30 Krüger, Jule, Sat 14.45 Kselman, Daniel, Sat 14.45, Sat 17.00 Kucik, Jeffrey, Thu 12.30 Kuechenhoff, Helmut, Fri 8.30 Kugler, Jacek, Thu 17.00 Landa, Dimitri, Fri 8.30, Sat 14.45 Landry, Pierre, Fri 8.30 Landwehr, Claudia, Thu 12.30 Lapuente, Victor, Fri 10.30 Larcinese, Valentino, Fri 14.45, Sat 10.30 Larsson, Olof, Thu 14.45 Lassen, David, Fri 17.00 Lauderdale, Benjamin, Thu 17.00, Sat 12.30 Lavezzolo, Sebastián, Sat 10.30 Le Bihan, Patrick, Sat 10.30 LeBas, Adrienne, Fri 8.30, Sat 17.00 Lebo, Matthew, Fri 14.45 Leemann, Lucas, Fri 8.30, Fri 10.30 Lefler, Vanessa, Fri 8.30 Lehrer, Ron, Fri 8.30 Leiter, Debra, Thu 12.30 Lessard-Phillips, Laurence, Fri 10.30 Leuffen, Dirk, Fri 10.30, Sat 8.30 Lierse, Hanna, Fri 10.30, Sat 14.45 Lindemann, Stefan, Sat 12.30 Lindstaedt, Rene, Thu 12.30, Thu 17.00, Sat 14.45, Thu 14.45 Little, Andrew, Thu 14.45, Sat 14.45 Littvay, Levente, Sat 8.30 Loewen, Peter, Sat 10.30 Loftis, Matt, Sat 8.30, Sat 12.30 Loukoianova, Elena, Sat 10.30 Lowe, Will, Thu 14.45 Lucardi, Adrian, Thu 14.45 Lüchinger, Simon, Fri 14.45 Luig, Bernd, Sat 10.30 Luyten, Adriaan, Fri 10.30 Lyytikäinen, Teemu, Sat 12.30 Magalhaes, Leandro, Fri 14.45 Magalhães, Pedro, Thu 12.30 Maggetti, Martino, Thu 10.30 Mainenti, Marco, Sat 12.30 Malang, Thomas, Sat 8.30 Manger, Mark, Fri 14.45, Fri 17.00 Manow, Philip, Fri 8.30, Sat 12.30, Sat 10.30 Manzetti, Luigi, Thu 12.30 Mao, Weizhun, Fri 14.45 Marcinkiewicz, Kamil, Sat 8.30 Mares, Isabela, Fri 8.30 Margalit, Yotam, Fri 17.00 60 Marier, Patrik, Sat 8.30 Mariotto, Camilla, Thu 14.45 Martin, Andrew, Sat 10.30, Sat 14.45 Martin, Christian, Thu 14.45, Thu. 12.30 Martin, Gregory, Sat 14.45, Sat 8.30 Martin, Lanny, Sat 17.00 Martinez, Gina, Sat 8.30 Martinsen, Dorte, Sat 14.45 Mateo, Gemma, Fri 14.45 Matsuo, Akitaka, Thu 17.00 Mattes, Kyle, Sat 10.30 McCarty, Nolan, Sat 12.30, Thu 14.45 McDonald, Michael, Sat 14.45 McGirr, Shaun, Thu 17.00 Medve-Bálint, Gerg, Thu 10.30 Meffert, Michael, Fri 17.00 Meissner, Peter, Sat 14.45 Menendez, Irene, Sat 14.45 Merz, Nicolas, Thu 10.30 Meseguera, Covadonga, Fri 10.30, Fri 14.45 Meserve, Stephen, Fri 8.30, Sat 17.00, Sat 14.45 Metternich, Nils, Sat 14.45, Thu 12.30 Meyer, Marco, Sat 8.30 Meyer, Thomas, Thu 10.30, Fri 10.30, Fri 17.00, Thu 14.45 Meyer-Sahling, Jan-Hinrik, Sat 14.45 Michalik, Susanne, Sat 8.30 Mikhaylov, Slava, Fri 17.00, Sat 8.30 Milazzo, Caitlin, Sat 10.30, Fri 8.30 Miller, John, Sat 17.00 Millican, Adrian, Thu 12.30 Minoves-Triquell, Juli, Sat 8.30 Miodownik, Dan, Sat 14.45 Miroiu, Adrian, Fri 12.30 Mitchell, Neil, Fri 10.30 Monroe, Burt, Thu 14.45, Thu 14.45 Morgan-Collins, Mona, Sat 14.45 Mortensen, Peter, Fri 17.00 Moury, Catherine, Thu 12.30 Mühlböck, Monika, Thu 10.30 Müller, Jochen, Sat 12.30 Munzert, Simon, Thu 14.45 Murdoch, Zuzana, Sat 12.30 Murr, Andreas, Sat 8.30 Mutlu-Eren, Hande, Thu 14.45, Fri 17.00, Sat 10.30 Myatt, David, Thu 14.45, Sat 12.30 Neumayer, Eric, Thu 14.45, Fri 10.30, Thu 17.00 Neundorf, Anja, Sat 14.45, Fri 8.30 Nickel, Carsten, Fri 8.30 Nicklesburg, Jerry, Sat 17.00 Nielsen, Ulrik, Thu 12.30 Nieman, Mark, Fri 12.30 Nikolova, Elena, Thu 17.00, Sat 10.30 Nooruddin, Irfan, Fri 12.30, Thu 12.30 Novak, Stéphanie, Sat 8.30, Sat 12.30 Nygård, Håvard, Thu 14.45, Fri 14.45, Sat 12.30, Sat 14.45, Thu 12.30 Oberthuer, Sebastian, Thu 17.00 Obholzer, Lukas, Fri 17.00 Oge, Kerem, Fri 12.30 Ohmura, Tamaki, Sat 14.45 O'Malley, Eoin, Thu 12.30 Onderco, Michal, Fri 12.30 Onorato, Massimiliano, Sat 12.30 Ozdemir, Elif, Sat 8.30 Pagliari, Stefano, Fri 17.00 Palmer, Harvey, Fri 14.45 Papavero, Licia, Fri 14.45 Pardos-Prado, Sergi, Thu 12.30, Fri 12.30 Partheymüller, Julia, Fri 12.30 Payton, Autumn, Sat 8.30 Pedrazzani, Andrea, Fri 14.45 Pelc, Krzysztof, Thu 12.30 Pellegata, Alessandro, Thu 14.45 Pellicer, Miquel, Sat 12.30 Pemstein, Daniel, Fri 8.30, Sat 17.00 Peskowitz, Zachary, Thu 14.45 Peterson, Timothy, Fri 8.30 Petrarca, Constanza, Fri 12.30 Pettersson-Lidbom, Per, Sat 14.45 Pierce, Douglas, Sat 8.30 Pierskalla, Jan, Fri 17.00 Pilet, Jean-Benoit, Thu 14.45 Pinto, Luca, Fri 14.45 Plescia, Carolina, Fri 12.30 Plümper, Thomas, Thu 14.45, Fri 10.30 Popa, Mircea, Thu 17.00, Fri 14.45 Pospieszna, Paulina, Sat 14.45 Powell, Scott, Sat 10.30 Powers, Matthew, Thu 17.00, Fri 8.30 Priebe, Stefan, Thu 10.30 Proksch, Sven-Oliver, Thu 12.30, Sat 12.30 Puglisi, Riccardo, Sat 10.30 Puy, Socorro, Fri 8.30 Nachmias, David, Thu 12.30, Sat 12.30 Nai, Alessandro, Fri 8.30, Fri 17.00, Sat 12.30 Naurin, Daniel, Thu 14.45, Thu 14.45 Nesti, Giorgia, Thu 10.30 Neudorfer, Benjamin, Thu 10.30 Neudorfer, Natascha, Thu 10.30 Quinlan, Stephen, Fri 10.30 Quinn, Kevin, Sat 10.30 61 Quiroz Flores, Alejandro, Fri 12.30, Sat 14.45 Schneider, Christina, Sat 8.30, Fri 10.30 Schneider, Gerald, Thu 12.30, Sat 12.30, Sat 14.45, Thu 10.45 Schneider, Micha, Fri 17.00 Schneider, Steffen, Fri 10.30 Schoen, Harald, Thu 12.30, Sat 8.30 Schröder, Valentin, Fri 8.30, Sat 8.30 Schrodt, Philip, Thu 14.45, Thu 17.00 Schubiger, Livia, Thu 10.30 Schultz, Daniel, Thu 10.30, Fri 17.00 Schultze, Henrike, Thu 12.30 Schumacher, Gijs, Thu 12.30, Thu 14.45 Schutte, Sebastian, Sat 12.30 Schwarz, Daniel, Thu 14.45 Scotto, Thomas, Sat 8.30, Thu 17.00 Scully, Roger, Thu 12.30 Seelkopf, Laura, Fri 10.30, Sat 8.30 Seki, Katsunori, Fri 8.30, Sat 17.00 Selb, Peter, Sat 14.45 Semenovich, Dimitri, Sat 14.45 Seymour, Lee, Fri 12.30, Sat 12.30 Shikano, Susumu, Fri 14.45 Shomer, Yael, Sat 8.30 Shotts, Kenneth, Thu 14.45, Fri 17.00 Sichel, Debora, Thu 12.30, Fri 14.45 Siegel, David, Thu 17.00 Signorino, Curtis, Thu 12.30, Fri 10.30, Fri 14.45 Simoni, Marco, Sat 10.30, Fri 17.00 Simral, Vit, Fri 8.30 Skirmuntt, Mariana, Thu 17.00, Fri 8.30 Slapin, Jonathan, Thu 12.30 Smiles, Jonathan, Fri 14.45, Thu 17.00 Snyder, James, Sat 10.30 So, Florence, Thu 14.45, Sat 10.30, Fri 17.00 Soares, Maria, Thu 12.30 Sohlberg, Jacob, Thu 17.00 Solé-Ollé, Albert, Fri 14.45 Sommer, Udi, Sat 12.30 Sørensen, Rune, Thu 14.45, Thu 17.00 Soroka, Stuart, Sat 14.45 Sorribas-Navarro, Pilar, Fri 14.45 Soskice, David, Fri 12.30 Sowmya, Arcot, Sat 14.45 Spilker, Gabriele, Thu 17.00, Sat 10.30 Spirling, Arthur, Fri 17.00, Sat 10.30 Spoon, Jae-Jae, Thu 10.30, Sat 8.30, Thu 17.00 Squintani, Francesco, Sat 12.30 Stanig, Piero, Thu 14.45, Fri 12.30 Stasavage, David, Sat 12.30 Steele, Carie, Fri 10.30, Fri 12.30, Thu 12.30, Sat 8.30 Stegmaier, Mary, Fri 14.45 Stegmueller, Daniel, Thu 17.00, Sat 10.30, Sat 14.45 Steiner, Nils, Thu 12.30 Rabitz, Florian, Thu 17.00 Ramon, Anna, Fri 14.45 Ramos, Antonio, Thu 12.30, Thu 12.30 Rangel-Alfaro, Diana, Thu 14.45 Rauh, Christian, Sat 8.30 Real-Dato, José, Fri 17.00 Redlawsk, David, Sat 8.30, Thu 14.45 Regel, Sven, Thu 10.30 Reifler, Jason, Sat 8.30 Reinhard, Janine, Fri 14.45 Reinsberg, Bernhard, Fri 10.30, Sat 8.30 Reuter, Ora, Sat 12.30 Riera, Pedro, Fri 14.45 Rittberger, Berthold, Fri 10.30, Fri 10.30 Rivero-Rodriguez, Gonzalo, Sat 12.30 Rodon, Toni, Fri 12.30 Roescu, Andra-Maria, Fri 12.30, Fri 14.45, Sat 8.30 Roessler, Philip, Thu 10.30, Sat 8.30 Rohlfing, Ingo, Thu 10.30, Fri 12.30 Rooduijn, Matthijs, Thu 12.30 Rosas, Guillermo, Thu 12.30, Thu 14.45, Sat 10.30 Rosendorff, Peter, Fri 10.30 Rosenthal, Maoz, Thu 12.30, Sat 12.30 Roussias, Nasos, Fri 14.45 Rubenson, Daniel, Sat 10.30 Rueda, David, Fri 8.30 Ruggeri, Andrea, Fri 12.30, Sat 10.30 Ruiz-Rufino, Rubén, Fri 14.45, Sat 12.30 Ryan, John, Sat 10.30 Sagarzazu, Iñaki, Fri 12.30, Fri 8.30 Sagrera, Pedro, Thu 14.45 Sajons, Christoph, Sat 10.30 Sajuria, Javier, Sat 10.30 Sanchez-Cuenca, Ignazio, Sat 14.45, Fri 14.45 Satyanath, Shanker, Sat 14.45 Savun, Burcu, Sat 14.45 Sawyer, Richard, Sat 10.30 Scacco, Alexandra, Thu 10.30, Sat 8.30 Schaeubli, Thomas, Fri 17.00 Schaffer, Lena, Thu 12.30, Thu 17.00, Sat 10.30, Fri 12.30 Schedler, Andreas, Thu 14.45 Schelker, Mark, Fri 14.45, Sat 12.30, Thu 10.45 Scheve, Kenneth, Sat 12.30 Schiemann, John, Thu 10.30 Schimmelfennig, Frank, Fri 10.30, Fri 10.30, Thu 12.30 Schmitt, Carina, Thu 14.45 Schmitt-Beck, Rüdiger, Fri 12.30 Schmotz, Alexander, Sat 14.45 62 Steunenberg, Bernard, Thu 17.00, Fri 10.30 Stevenson, Randolph, Fri 10.30 Stockmann, Daniela, Fri 8.30 Stoetzer, Lukas, Sat 12.30, Sat 12.30 Stone, Peter, Thu 10.30 Strand, Håvard, Thu 14.45 Stutzer, Alois, Fri 14.45 Sudulich, Maria, Fri 14.45 Suiter, Jane, Thu 12.30 Surak, Sarah, Thu 17.00 Vernby, Kåre, Sat 14.45, Thu 10.30 Vial, Camilo, Fri 10.30 Vivyan, Nick, Sat 8.30, Sat 10.30 Vlandas, Timothee, Sat 10.30 Vlasceanu, Mirela, Fri 12.30, Fri 14.45, Sat 17.00 Vogt, Manuel, Thu 10.30 von Borzyskowski, Inken, Sat 10.30, Fri 12.30 Vreeland, James, Fri 10.30 Wagner, Aiko, Fri 8.30 Wagner, Markus, Thu 10.30, Fri 17.00, Sat 8.30, Sat 10.30 Wagner, Wolfgang, Sat 8.30 Walter, Stefanie, Thu 10.30, Fri 17.00, Sat 14.45, Sat 17.00 Warntjen, Andreas, Fri 14.45 Weber, Jeffrey, Thu 17.00 Weber, Till, Thu 17.00, Sat 8.30, Sat 12.30 Weeks, Liam, Fri 10.30, Fri 17.00, Sat 10.30 Wegenast, Tim, Thu 17.00 Wegmann, Simone, Thu 14.45, Thu 17.00 Wegner, Eva, Sat 12.30 Wehner, Joachim, Fri 12.30, Fri 17.00, Thu 10.45 Weisiger, Alex, Thu 17.00, Fri 8.30 Weschle, Simon, Fri 17.00 Weßels, Bernhard, Fri 10.30 Wiesehomeier, Nina, Thu 12.30 Wietzke, Frank-Borge, Thu 10.30, Sat 17.00 Wilf, Meredith, Thu 12.30, Sat 10.30 Williams, Laron, Fri 14.45 Winters, Matthew, Sat 8.30, Fri 10.30 Wittig, Caroline, Fri 8.30 Wlezien, Christopher, Thu 10.30 Wood, Terence, Fri 10.30 Worthington, Alton, Thu 12.30, Sat 8.30 Wright, Joseph, Thu 14.45, Fri 10.30, Fri 14.45 Wucherpfennig, Julian, Thu 12.30, Sat 14.45, Fri 12.30 Wüest, Reto, Thu 17.00 Tanaka, Seiki, Fri 8.30 Tanneberg, Dag, Sat 14.45 Tarlov, Jessie, Sat 8.30 Tatham, Michael, Fri 14.45 Tepe, Markus, Fri 14.45, Sat 8.30, Sat 12.30, Sat 14.45 Thies, Cameron, Fri 8.30, Thu 17.00 Thissen-Smits, Marianne, Fri 10.30 Thomas, Kathrin, Thu 10.30 Thomson, Robert, Thu 14.45, Sat 12.30 Thomsson, Kaj, Sat 14.45 Thurner, Paul, Fri 8.30, Fri 17.00, Thu 10.45 Tiemann, Guido, Fri 10.30, Fri 12.30, Thu 10.45 Timmons, Jeffrey, Sat 17.00, Thu 17.00 Tingley, Dustin, Fri 12.30 Torregrosa, Nhorys, Thu 12.30 Torregrosa, Rodolfo, Thu 12.30, Thu 12.30 Tosun, Jale, Fri 10.30 Traber, Denise, Thu 14.45 Traunmueller, Richard, Sat 10.30 Trein, Philipp, Thu 12.30 Troeger, Vera, Fri 10.30, Fri 12.30, Thu 12.30 Trumm, Siim, Thu 17.00 Tucker, Joshua, Fri 10.30 Tucker, Peter, Fri 17.00 Tukiainen, Janne, Sat 12.30 Tyran, Jean-Robert, Thu 12.30 Tzelgov, Eitan, Thu 14.45 Umeda, Michio, Fri 12.30 Uyar, Emrah, Sat 12.30 Xefteris, Dimitrios, Thu 14.45 Yano, Tae, Sat 8.30 Yordanova, Nikoleta, Thu 10.30 Young, Kevin, Fri 17.00, Fri 17.00 Van Aken, Wim, Sat 14.45, Sat 8.30 Van Coppenolle, Brenda, Fri 17.00, Sat 8.30 van den Berg, Gerard, Fri 14.45 van der Burg, Wouter, Thu 17.00 van Elsas, Erika, Thu 17.00 Vanberg, Georg, Sat 17.00 Vanhuysse, Pieter, Sat 12.30 Vasilopoulou, Sofia, Sat 10.30 Vegetti, Federico, Thu 12.30, Thu 17.00 Vermeir, Jan, Fri 17.00 Zahariadis, Nikolaos, Thu 10.30 Zakharov, Alexei, Fri 8.30 Zandonella, Martina, Sat 12.30 Zeglovits, Eva, Sat 12.30, Thu 14.45 Zemmour, Michaël, Thu 17.00, Fri 12.30, Sat 10.30 Żerkowska-Balas, Marta, Fri 10.30 Ziller, Conrad, Thu 10.30 63 Zoffmann,"Lindegaard,"Fri"8.30" Zubek,"Radoslaw,"Sat"12.30" Zubida,"Hani,"Thu"12.30,"Sat"12.30" Zucchini,"Francesco,"Fri"14.45" Zudenkova,"Galina,"Fri"12.30" " " " " " " " " " " " " " " " " " " " " Verbi Software is the developer and distributor of MAXQDA, a state-of-the-art software for qualitative data analysis. For more than 20 years, MAXQDA has been the professional text analysis software of choice for thousands of researchers in various disciplines around the world. www.maxqda.com. 66" " # # # # # # # # # # # # # !!!!!!!The!British! Election!Study! # # # # # # 67# # 66
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